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A69010 Institutions of Christian religion framed out of Gods word, and the writings of the best diuines, methodically handled by questions and answers, fit for all such as desire to know, or practise the will of God. Written in Latin by William Bucanus Professor of Diuinitie in the Vniuersitie of Lausanna. And published in English by Robert Hill, Bachelor in Diuinitie, and Fellow of Saint Iohns Colledge in Cambridge, for the benefit of our English nation, to which is added in the end the practise of papists against Protestant princes.; Institutiones theologicae. English Bucanus, Guillaume. 1606 (1606) STC 3961; ESTC S106002 729,267 922

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dying What then should haue become of man in the conclusion if he had not sinned should he haue euer liued vpon earth No but he should in the end haue remoued into heauen indeed without death which is the dissolution of the soule from the body but yet not without some change such as the Apostle speaketh of 1. Cor. 15.51 shall be in the bodies of the elect who shall be then liuing in the comming of the Lord they shall remoue hence into heauen What things be contrary to this doctrine The errour of the Pelagians who affirmed that man should haue died although he had neuer sinned against those speeches Gen. 2.17 and 3.3 Rom. 5.12 and 1. Cor. 15.21 The twelfth common Place of Mariage What thinke you of Mariage is it a diuine humane or politike constitution IT is diuine 1. because it was instituted by God in Paradise a Gen. 1.27 2.15 betwixt Adam and Eue in their innocencie they then bearing the true image of God 2. Because it was a type of that truly diuine and spirituall mariage which was to be betwixt Christ and his Church b Ephes 5.23 3. Because it was ordained for the propagation of the Church and for the further helping forwards the saluation of man It is also humane or politike or as I may say of humane constitution 1. because it was instituted for the propagation of mankind and ciuill societie vpon earth for in heauen they marry not but are like the Angels of God Mat. 22.30 2. Because for the most part it dependeth vpon the honest constitutions made by man for that purpose How proue you that mariage was instituted by God Gen. 2.18 God said that is in his most wise counsel decreed and ordained it is not good for man to be alone let vs make an helper or companion of his life like vnto him and when he could finde none for Adam before him God brought vpon him a dead sleepe and whilest he was asleepe and so being brought as it were into an extasie voide of griefe and was naturally ignorant what was done took one of his ribs and thereof made woman whom he brought vnto Adam who being led by the spirit of God did prophesie saying This is bone of my bone and flesh of my flesh she shall be called Ischa that is Vira Mannesse because she was taken out of man being as it were alter-ipse a second self For this cause shall man leaue his father and mother and cleaue vnto his wife and they shall be one flesh And after the deluge God confirmed mariage and blessed it saying Increase and multiply b Gen 9.1 At length the Sonne of God himselfe restored it being somewhat decaid c Math. 19.4.5.6 honoring the same both with his presence and miraculous gift d Ioh. 2.11 c. To conclude God not onely instituted mariage but also stirreth vp mutuall loue betweene the bride and the bridegroome and furdereth mariage e Genes 24.14 50 51. Whence it followeth first that mariages are not by chance or depending on mans arbiterment onely but are fatall and gouerned by Gods prouidence Secondly that mariage is a good and a holy thing Thirdly that it is to be vndertaken in the feare of God and inuocation for his direction But are not Moses and Paul contrary one to another where it is said Gen. 2.18 It is not good for man to be alone and 1. Cor. 7.1 g Gen. 2.18 It is good for man not to touch a woman h 1. Cor. 7.1 No for that Paul speaketh first of good which is profitable and not of honestie and he doth not oppose good vnto vice or sinne but vnto inconuenient Secondly because that in Genesis is vnderstood of the species or greatest part of mankind which wold decay if it were not continued and increased by mariage neither can a man liue chastly without mariage but Paul speaketh of certaine indiuidua or persons hauing the gift so as they can liue chastly without mariage for of others he saith It is better to marrie then to burne i 1. Cor. 7.9 But tell me whether Paul speaking of a virgin 1. Cor. 7.38 k 1. Cor. 7.38 and saying He that bestoweth her not in mariage doth better do meane that virginitie deserueth more the fauour of God then mariage He speaketh onely of some outward commodities of the single life for the present necessitie that is imminent persecutions l verse 26. and for that the vnmaried is more expedite and fit to teach to serue the Church to vndergo the dangers of his profession and the duties of piety with a better and freer mind m verse 32.34 and insinuateth more difficulty to be in mariage then in the single life as he speaketh concerning the maried Such shall haue trouble in the flesh n verse 28 and more distraction of thoughts and care for the things of this world o vers 33.34 and therfore that the single life is more profitable vnto him that hath the gift of continencie and lesse subiect to distractions and troubles and in this respect more blessed then mariage p verse 40. Notwithstanding the godly maried may also care for those things which belong vnto the Lord as Abraham Isaac Iacob Zacharias Iohn Baptists father and the like What is contrary to this doctrine concerning the efficient cause of Matrimonie The heresie of Montanus the Tatians Saturnians Manichees Marcionites Priscillianists Encratites who condemned mariage as the doctrine and worke of the diuell Pope Syricius differed not much from this heresie who called matrimonie vncleannesse of the flesh in which no man might please God Vnto all whom that saying of S. Paul is to be opposed 1. Tim. 4. 1. Tim. 4.1.2.3.4 Of the matter of Mariage Of how many and of what manner of persons ought Mariage to consist Of two onely one man and one woman for so saith the Lord Two shal be one flesh a Gen. 1.27 2.24 Mat. 19.5 and so many suffice for procreation of offspring But whenas the maried couples giue themselues mutually one to another they are both the second causes efficient and they also the matter of mariage What is contrary to this Polygamie not of hauing many wiues successiuely when one succeedeth another but of enioying more then one at one and the same time Gen. 4.19 which corruptiō of lawful mariage begun in Lamech of Cains race and was afterwards permitted vnto the Fathers not for wantonnesse but for increase of an holy seed both for that politick customes were at that time as also that God might thereby manifest his promise of an innumerable seede to spring of a few But Christ condemned it afterwards Mat. 19.8 5.32 saying It was not so from the beginning and declaring that who so putteth away his wife and taketh another committeth adulterie For that God being about to giue Adam a wife tooke not two or more but one ribbe out of
compassed me and the griefes of the graue caught mee when I found trouble and sorrow 4 According to some mens interpretation it signifieth the generall state and condition of the dead whether the good estate of the aged or the euill of the wicked 5 In others iudgement it signifieth the extreemest degree of humiliation What signifieth the word Descending 1 It properly signifieth a motion from a high place to a lower 2 By a tropicall speech it signifieth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the descending of Christ or the last degree of his humiliation ●s Ephes 4.10 He that descended that is he that made himselfe base and of no reputation and taking vpon himselfe the forme of a seruant subiected himselfe to the miserable condition of this earthly life he is euen the same that ascended aboue all heauens What therfore is the meaning of this article He descended into hell It is diuers accordingly as the simple words are taken in diuers significations What is the first The first interpretation is of them that thinke these words are added for better explanation sake against the heresie of the Valentinians and that no other thing is heereby meant then that Christ was truly dead and laid in his graue as other men who haue beene dead and buried VVhat thinke you of this exposition That it is too sleight and trifling because it is not likely that the buriall of Christ being declared in plaine words should be deliuered in a more obscure forme of speech neither doth such a rep●tition of the same thing befit such a briefe and compendious rehearsall of the chiefe heads of our faith What is the second It is Hieromes and the Papists who thinke that Christs soule being separated from the bodie came to a certaine place which they call Limbus patrum to wit the vpper part or an vpper roome as it were of hell in which there are no punishments but onely a depriuation of a better and more perfect good In which place they say the Spirits of the faithfull fathers did remaine before Christs incarnation from whence afterwards the soule of Christ comming thither in deed did bring them with himselfe into heauen Which thing they go about to confirme out of Mathew 27.52 Many besides of the Saints rose againe either with Christ or after him and 1. Pet. 3.19 By which also he went and preached vnto the spirits which are in prison and 4.6 for vnto this purpose also was the Gospell preached vnto the dead Doe you like this opinion No 1 for such a place cannot be proued by any testimonie of Scripture 2 Because we read that not all the Saints bodies but some only rose againe with Christ to testifie the power of Christs resurrection whereby life is restored to vs. 3 The place 1. Pet. 3.16 Is manifestly to be vnderstood concerning Christs spirit which preached repētance by the mouth of Noah to the disobedient and wicked and the place in the fourth Chapter is to be vnderstood of the Gospell which was preached to them which were dead in former times that is which were indeed aliue when they were preached vnto but were dead at what time this was spoken of them Also because this opinion doth not a little detract from the power of Christs sacrifice the price whereof is infinite and extendeth it selfe vnto all times according to that which was said Apoc. 13.8 The Lambe was slaine from the beginning of the world Therefore Abraham was deliuered from hell by the merit of Christs sacrifice no lesse then Paule or any one of the godly that died after Christ was giuen for our redemption What is the third opinion The third is of them who thinke that Christ did indeed descend into the place of hell But this opinion is diuided three waies For some there are who say that the soule of Christ did go downe thither whilest his bodie lay in the graue that there it might suffer for the soules of men Which opinion is by three reasons confuted 1 Because the bloud of Christ is a most perfect expiation for all the world a Iohn 1.7 2 It is confuted by Christs saying vpon the crosse It is finished Ioh. 19.30 Therefore he had no more to suffer when as death made an end of his torments 3 Because Christ endured horrible torments in his soule whilest it was yet in his bodie as is manifest by that terrible crying My God my God c. Mat. 27.46 which shooke both heauen earth 2 Others say that the soule of Christ descended into hell not that it might suffer any thing there but that as in his bodie he had preached vpon earth the Gospell to them who were liuing so being dead he might in his spirit preach the Gospell to them in hell which opinion commeth neere to the second of those formerly repeated by vs. But to what purpose had this beene seeing after death there is no place left for preaching and repentance Moreouer he commended his spirit into the hands of his father and said vnto the theefe This day shalt thou be with me in Paradise where vndoubtedly there is no hell Luke 23.43.46 3 The fathers for the most part of them do labour to shew that in the very earthquake momët of his resurrectiō Christ did prese●t himself aliue to thē in hell shewed himselfe not so much in wordes as in deede conquerour of death and of the Prince of darknesse and that Sathan had no more power ouer the elect and that hee had a name giuen him aboue all names that at the name of Iesus euerie knee should bow both of things in heauen and things in the earth and things vnder the earth Phil. 2.10 For this cause Augustine saith thus The whole Sonne was with the Father the whole Sonne in the wombe of the virgin the whole in heauen the whole in the earth the whole on the Crosse and the whole in Hell VVhat thinke you of this iudgement of the Fathers I dare not condemne it seeing it is not against the holy Scriptures and hath in it no absurditie And the consent of Fathers when as it manifestly doth not disagree with the Scriptures is not lightly to be accounted of Yea more this opinion may seeme probable to be gathered out of the Apostles words Ephes 4.9 Now that he ascended aboue all heauens what is it else but that hee had also descended first into the lowest parts of the earth For here there is a manifest opposition betwixt aboue all heauens and the lowest part of the earth But the first is taken according to the letter therefore also the second as it seemeth must be vnderstood according to the letter but there is no part of the earth lower then hell which is the place of the damned Although others by the lowest parts vnderstand simply the whole earth which is the lowest part of the world into which Christ descended and liued in it for many yeares What is the fourth opinion Of them who saie that
Whereupon Gregorie in his homilie of the Ascention To sit saith hee is proper to him that iudgeth to stand proper to him that fighteth and defendeth Stephen therefore beeing in the laboure and trauell of his combat saw him standing whome hee had for his helper but then after his ascention Marke describes him sitting because after the glorie of his Ascention hee shall in the end bee seene as a Iudge thus farre Saint Gregorie Doth not the omnipresence or the beeing euery where of his bodie follow vpon the sitting of Christ at the right hand of his Father seeing the right hand of the Father at which he sitteth is euerie where Surely no no more then eternitie or vncorporallenesse doth inasmuch as the same right hand is without bodie and eternall 2. The bodie is not said to bee the right hand but figuratiuely To sit at the right hand Now it is no good argument to reason from a figuratiue speach to a proper 3. Wee shall also be placed at the right hand of Christ and yet we shall not be euery where 4. A man may raigne in many seuerall places although hee bee not essentially in them and therefore it is but a least to make the essence of Christs humanitie to stretch as farre as his rule and gouernment or on the contrarie to hemme in his power and essence within the same limits Neither doth this sitting take away the essentiall properties of his humane nature which beeing taken away the nature of man should not bee glorified but vtterly abolished But what then is not Christ euery where Hee is but by communication of properties to signifie that great coniunction of two natures in Christ alone according to that Iohn 3.13 No man ascendeth vp into Heauen but he that hath descended from Heauen the Sonne of man which is in Heauen For Christ is so one as that which is proper vnto him in regard onely of one of his natures is sometimes attributed to whole Christ in respect of the vnitie of his person How many parts are there of this sitting Two 1. Exceeding great glorie and that both humane and inherent in the humane nature as in a subiect and by habituall grace shining ouer euery Creature and also Diuine proceeding from the deitie dwelling in humane nature In this respect Act. 7.55.56 Stephen sawe the glorie of God and the heauens open and Christ sitting at the right hand of the father that is in an estate exeeeding glorious or shining with the Diuine and humane nature 2. A full administration of a kingdome whereby Christ being so exceeding glorious doth exercise dominion ouer all things created in heauen and in earth Ephe. 1.20.21 22. This Iesus when he raised him from the dead hee set him at his right hand in heauen farre aboue all principalitie and power and might and Dominion and euery name that is named not onely in this world but also in that that is to come And 1. Pet. 3.22 which is at the right hand of God gone into heauen to vvhome the Angels and powers and might are subiect VVhat is the end 1. That such exceeding maiestie and glorie might follow such extreame humiliation and infamie 2. That he might enioy most blessed rest both in body and in soule 3. That both heauenly and earthly creatures might looke vp vnto his maiestie might bee gouerned by his hand attend vpon his becke and might be subiect to his power Phil. 2.9.10 God hath highly exalted him giuen him a name aboue euerie name that at the name of Iesus euery knee should bow both of things in heauen things in earth things vnder the earth What are the effectes or fruites 1. That he subdueth all his and his seruants enemies 2. Hee gouerneth his seruants by his spirit and by little little perfecteth them 3. By his intercession to his father and by the perpetuall force and efficacie of his sacrifice hee obtaineth peace for his seruants Heb. 7.25 Hee euer liueth to make intercession for them and he doth bring to passe that the father doth account all his seruants acceptable and beloued in his sonne and doth alwaies embrace thē with a fatherly affection and hee doth alwaies appeare before his father in heauen that as the onely Mediator hee may sanctifie their prayers by the sweete smelling sauour of his sacrifice and may offer them to his father and make them acceptable Rom. 8.34 Christ sitteth at the right hand of God and maketh request for vs. 4. Hauing all thinges in his power he doth most mightily defend and preserue his Chrurch yet militant on earth and that by diuers meanes against all the assaults of Sathan 5. Hee admitteth his members according to that they are able to receiue euen to the fellowshippe of his eternall glorie not only in potentia in power nor in right or in hope alone but euen in act but yet in himself as in the head as members ioyned vnto the head and that by a threefold maner of coniunction or knitting together 1. Of his eternall predestination whereby he hath chosen vs to bee his members 2. By the coniunction of his flesh whereby he hath coupled our flesh vnto himselfe by an hypostaticall vnion although not in generall for then it should agree with euery man to be the word of God as it agreeth with Christ but yet in the particuler and in indiuidno as Damascen speaketh in his first booke and 11. Chapter 3. By the coniunction of his spirit whereby communicating vnto vs his spirit he doth ioyne vs most neerely vnto himselfe and maketh vs flesh of his flesh and bone of his bones Ephe. 2.6 And hath raised vs vp together and hath made vs sit together in Heauen in Christ Iesus But in the world to come hee will indeed really admit vs to the fellowshippe of this eternall glorie in full possession For Mat. 25.23 Hee will place the sheepe on his right hand And Mat. 19.28 It is saide That wee shall sit together with Christ in heauen And 1. Cor. 6.2.3 that wee shal iudge the world and the Angels and shall raigne together with Christ Apoc. 3.21 To him that ouercommeth will I graunt to sit with me in my throne euen as I ouercame and sit with my father in his throne And Ioh. 17.24 Father I will that they vvhome thou hast giuen me be vvith me euenvvhere I am yet so that Christ as the head alwaies hath the preeminence What meaneth Christ then vvhen hee saith Mat. 20.23 To sit at my right hand and at my left hand is not mine to giue but it shall be giuen to them for vvhome it is prepared of my Father Hee speaketh according to their opinion by whome hee wa● demaunded and which dreamed of a kingdome of the Messias in this world neither doth hee derogate any thing from his owne power but declareth that it was not enioyned him by his father that hee should assigne vnto euery man a degree in the kingdom of heauen but that hee
delectable because the elect shall enioy al their desires for whatsoeuer saith Bernard shall be delightfull will there bee present and there shall bee nothing to be wisht for that shall bee wanting there and they shall feele most excellent and sincere pleasure both in soule and bodie by the presence of Christ and dailie heholding of God Psal 16.11 Thou wilt shew me the path of life in thy presence is the fulnesse of ioy at thy right hand there are pleasures for euermore And 17.15 When I awake from the dead I shall bee satisfied with thine image For how great will the delight be in the beholding of that soueraigne good which is the storehouse of all good things and of all ioyes Hence proceedeth that eternall gladnesse or perpetuall and vnspeakable ioy which the holy Ghost shall stirre vp in the Elect and which none shall take from vs. Ioh. 16.22.5 A participation of Diuine nature that is not a powring out of the diuine essence but of diuine qualities into vs that is a cōmunication of Gods immortalitie glorie vertue wisdome iustice and image c 2 Pet. 14 which shall bee those white garments of the Saints the long white robes and garments of pure fine linnen and shining wherewith the elect shall be cloathed d Reue. 3.4.5 6.11 1.13 19.8 6. There shall be also a clarifying of bodies excellent beauty maiesty wherein they shall be made like to the glorious bodie of Christ Phil. 3.21 and the iust men shall shine as the sunne e Math. 13.43 and they shall glister as the brightnesse of the firmament Dan. 12 3. And they shall be as the Angels of God f Luk. 20 36 7 There shall be the Tryumph of the elect ouer the Diuel Death and Hel g Rom 16.20 Revel 20.10 14 Fellowship with al the blessed conuersation with the holy Angels perfect Loue of God and our neighbour Concord and exceeding quietnesse of all things for there they shall bee all of one minde because their will shal be none other but the will of God so that whatsoeuer they desire shal come to passe Melodie for there wee shall sing with quiers of Angels praising god without end for euer Last of all there shal be al the good gifts of body and soule such as neither the eye hath seene nor eare hath heard nor heart of man imagined 1 Cor. 2 9. who then would not desire to passe through thither with Christ by death Shall the glorie of euerlasting life be commune to all the elect after an equall measure No but as God bestoweth his gift on the elect in this life not alike vnequally so wil he crowne those gifts of his in the elect with an vnequal measure of glory in heauen For that saying of Christ is proper to the Apostles Ye shall sit iudging the twelue tribes of Israel Mat 19 28. And Paule doubteth not but that there is a peculier crowne laide vp in store for him according to the proportion of his labours 1. Thes 2.19 and so Dan. 12.3 The wise saith he shall shine as the brightnesse of the firmament and they that turne many to righteousnesse shall shine as the starres for euer and euer And the Scripture doth not onely promise life eternall to the faithfull but in the same a speciall reward to euerie of them a Math 19 29 2 Tim. 4.8 This is probably perceiued by the reason of the contrary b Math 11 22.24 Hither may bee also alluded that saying of Paule 1 Cor. 15 41 For one starre differeth from another starre in glorie When shall eternall life take beginning It is begun in the minds of the faithfull in this life already when the holy spirite by the preaching of the worde doth endue their mindes with the true knowledge of God and bendeth their will to a readie obedience of his commandements yea they feele an earnest peny therof haue a most true tast of it Eph. 1.4 whence floweth that hope which cannot faile the faithfull Ro 5.2.5 We greatly reioyce vnder the hope of the glorie of God And hope maketh not ashamed Finally we haue passed alreadie from death to life by faith in Christ c Ioh 5.24 1 Ioh. 3.14 because what we possesse through hope we know shal be as certainly as if it were in verie deed already bestowed on vs. Yet shal we attaine the full possession consummation therof afterward in the time that God hath ordained in which after the number of those that shal be saued is fulfilled Christ our redeemer will appeare vnto vs from heauen Doe the soules of the godly already separated from their bodies enioy a perfect and absolute happinesse It is sufficient for vs to knowe that presently after the departure from the bodie the spirit returneth vnto God which gaue it Eccl. 12.7 and after the dissolution or vncoupling of the soule from the bodie it is with Christ d Phil. 1.23 In Paradise e Luk. 23.43 in peace f wisd 3.3 in rest g Heb 4.11 in comfort h Luk. 16.25 in refreshing or ease i Wisd 4.7 in securitie k Ioh. 11.15 18 in the hand of God that no anguish at all may touch it so much as slightly l Wisd 3.1 in glorifying of the name of God Yet because they looke for a resurrection of their bodies a most plentifull fruition of all good things which God hath promised to all that loue him they cannot be said to bee in a perfect absolute but in an vnperfect happines 2 Tim 4 8. There is a crowne of righteousnes laid vp for me which the Lord the righteous Iudge shall giue me at that daie not to me only but vnto all them also that loue that his glorious appearing And Reue. 6.9 I saw vnder the Altar the soules of thē that were killed for the word of God they cryed with a loud voice saying How long Lord which are holy true doest not thou iudge auenge our bloud on thē that dwell on the earth Then long white robes were deliuered vnto euery one it was said vnto them that they should rest for a little vntil their fellow seruāts their brethren that should be killed euen as they were were fulfilled On the contrary 2. Pet. 2.9 saith that the vniust are so punished either with the losse of this life or with other punishments as that they are neuerthelesse reserued against the day of iudgement to be tormented with far sharper torments namely eternall punishments both in body soule What is the place of eternall life Not this earth or aerie or Elementarie Region which as yet death horror and sinne the power of darknesse and wicked spirits doe inhabit a Iob. 10.22 Eph. 6.12 2 8 and which at length shall be dissolued b 2 pet 3.10 But the heauen of heauens or the highest heauen whereinto Christ as he was man ascended being made higher then the
visible heauens c Heb. 7.262 or that third heauen into which Paule was rapt which by Interpretation he calleth Paradise 2. Cor. 12.2.4 But after the Iudgement restoring of all things eternall life or the seate and place of the blessed shall bee not onely in the heauens but in the earth also For wee looke for new heauens and a new earth according to his promise wherein dwelleth righteousnesse that is which are the mansion place of the righteous Isa 65.16 2. Pet. 3.13 Reuel 21.1 What is the end of eternall life 1. That God may make good in very deede and fact his grace toward the elect 2. That the godly may enioy the fruite of Christs death and passion 3. That they may receiue rewardes meete for their labours d Tim 4.2 4. That they may acknowledge Gods bottomelesse mercie That they may see him for euer which is the end of all their desires and that they may praise him continually without tediousnesse VVhat are the effectes of eternall life 1. Our being like vnto the Angels that is not as touching the substance but as concerning the proper conditions of this life a Math. 22 30 2. Our participation of the dignitie of the man Christ for thē hee will make vs verily Kings Priests and Prophets with himselfe b rev 1 6 but with this condition that himselfe be vnspeakeablie aboue all in dignitie What is the vse of the Doctrine of life eternall 1. It is a comfort in calamities and iniuries whereunto we are subiect in this life 2 It mitigateth the sorrow which we take for them that are dead 3 It lesseneth the feare of death when wee beleeue that a better life shall follow after this death and when we thinke vpon that saying Reuel 14.13 Blessed are they that dye in the Lord. 4 It maketh vs earnest and cheerefull to performe our duetie to God and charitie to our neighbors with whome we shall haue a perpetuall conuersation hereafter in heauen What are the Opinions disagreeing thereunto 1 The absurd opinions of Democritus Epicurus Plinie Galene and others who iest at the question of eternall life and think that all parts perish with the bodie 2 The curious questions and determinations of the Papists concerning the degrees of the Saints in eternall life as of a thirtieth folde pofite to maried folke that liue chastly to them that keepe themselues widowes sixtiefold and to Virgins a hundreth folde to be recompensed And of them also who before the time desire to know what is done in heauen and take no care which way to goe to heauen 4 The opinions of some Fathers as Irenaus Tertullian and others who did not thinke that the soules of the godly went vnto heauen vntill after the resurrection but were in a temporary store-house receptacle or Region though not in an heauenly one yet in an higher then hell where they might haue a refreshing euen vntill the resurrection The errour of Pope Iohn the twentieth who thought that foules did not see God face to face vntill the last day of resurrection 6 Especially eternall death doth directly thwart eternall life and so likewise doth lamentation feare crying out mourning colde wearinesse sleepe sicknesse death hunger thirst pouertie the snares and temptations of Sathan torment feare of hell c. The fortieth common place Of eternall Death From whence is death deriued MAny take it in a good sense to be deriued from the Greeke word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as it were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 taken vpward vnto God and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to consider diligently those things which are aboue because it brings vs back againe to God It is also called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as it were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an entrance into eternall life In Latine Death seemeth to bee deriued from tarrying because death tarrieth or stayeth for vs and it commeth stealing on vs with a still foote or because it esteemeth the condition of none How manifold is death Fourefolde 1. A corporall death which is also called temporarie and it is either naturall or accidentall and it is either violent or a voluntarie separation of the soule from the bodie common both to the good and bad inflicted on all through the malice of Sathan by the iust iudgement of God for the sinne of Adam a Gen. 2 17 Ioh. 8.44 Ro 5.12.17 6.23 1 Co. 15.21 Heb 9.27 and it is called by Iohn the first death in respect of the wicked Reu. 20 14. And surely the godly doe not escape it likewise albeit their sinnes be forgiuen them 1. That thereby they might learne to hate sinne 2. That they might acknowledge the seueritie of Gods anger for sinne 3. That they might lay away the remnants of sinne togither with the miseries that cleaue vnto them by reason of sinne 4. That they might try the power of God in raising the deade and so their death and infirmitie might serue for their owne good and for Gods glorie And for that respect should it be desired of them after the example of Paule I desire to be dissolued Phil. 1.23 Not for that they are wearie of life or for their ownselues because this desire is contrarie to naturall reason but for another end namely because it is a deliuerance from sinne wholy as also from the miseries of this life and a passage vnto the bright presence of God a returning and remoouing from banishment not vnto a ruinous but vnto a new and most delectable dwelling a 2. Co. 5. ●0 Because it is an aduantage b Phil. 1.12 a passage to the father c Ioh. 5.24 13 1. and therefore not to be feared because Christ hath ouercome it d Ose 13 14 and it is such vnto vs as he hath made it e He. 2 4.3 and the verie hower thereof is appointed vnto euery one by God but it should bee desired by the desire of faith yet so that we continue in this earthly house as long as it shall seeme good to the Lord for the godly do rather wish to liue vnto the glorie of Christ then for their own benefite 2 A spirituall death and it is either of beleeuers or vnbeleeuers and that of the beleeuers is threefolde 1. Of sinne as concerning the strength that is the force or life of sinne which is called mortification Rom. 6.2.8 Wee are deade vnto sinne in the datiue case how shall wee liue yet therein 2. Of the Law but in part as farre as the Law is the power of sinne 1. Because it accounteth them which are in Christ guiltie no more 2. Neither doth it prouoke men to sinne Rom. 7.4 Yee are deade to the Law by the bodie of Christ And Gal. 2 16 19. I am dead to the law that I may liue vnto God for Christ maketh vs dead to the Lawe because by iustifying vs hee taketh away those terrours of conscience which the Lawe doth cast into vs and by sanctifying vs hee maketh
Sathan is not in respect of bodily affliction as some doe expound it seing Ecclesiasticall censures doe not appertaine to the bodie as ciuill doe but properly vnto the soule but amongst the Iewes there was casting out from the Synagogue a Ioh. 9.22 and to be cut off from the people b Gen. 17.14 Leuit. 7.2 and to be reputed for an heathen and Publican that is for profane and altogether irreligious c Mat. 18.17 but to bee excommunicated amongst Christians is to lose the right of a Christian citie vntill he repent and to bee made a vassall of Sathan who ruleth out of the Church Who are to be cited to this censure Not altogether aliants such as this day the Iewes and Turkes are neither Schismaticks hereticks and such as haue made a secesssion altogether from the Christian Church or such as neuer did associate thēselues to the true Church but those especially which yet are as conuersant in the bosome of the Church and haue not yet manifestly gone to them of a separation the Apostle testifying if any being named a brother that is which doth professe himselfe a member of the Church be an Adulterer a couetous person or an Idolater or slanderer or drunkard or an extortioner with such an one eate not nor haue any commerce with him for what haue I to do to iudge of them without doe not you iudge those that are within take away therefore the euill one from amongst you 1. Cor. 5.11.8 Who is the Author of the Ecclesiasticall censure God himselfe for alwaies from the beginning of the world this discipline was vsed in the Church of God wherby the Church in generall was not onely discerned from men which were manifestly profane as in times past before the flood the sonnes of God that is the godly which were deriued from the posteritie of Seth from the sonnes of men that is from the wicked of Caines familie d Gen. 4.26 6 4 but those which did misdemeane themselues were cast out of the bosome of the Church in which sense the ancient fathers thought Caine to bee cast out from the presence of the Lorde And those which were of mature yeares being vncircumcised if they did neglect circumcision or being by their parents neglected was approued of them were cut off by the commaundement of God from his people that is from the societie of the Saints g Gen. 17.14 and by the law of God diuerse rites concerning pollution as of the leaprosie and other seuerings purgings and expiations a Leuit. 5 1.2 13.2.40 14.2 Numb 5 2 6 19. were appointed to the consistorian Synagogue Lastly Christ himselfe hath expresly appointed this order being as we haue learned deriued vnto vs from the Church of Israell b Mat. 18.18 and Paul himselfe at Corinth and else where hath commanded the same to be kept c 1 Cor. 5.1 2.3.4.5 c. 1. Tim. 1.20 and 2. Thes 3.14 saith d 1. Cor. 1.2.18 if any harken not to our speech by Epistle marke him e 1. Tim. 4.14 to wit with the note of excommunication Who ought to haue the power of excommunication The Bishop and the Gouernours of the Church which the Pastor ought to denounce as it is apparant 1. Cor. 5.4 saith Paul being assembled with my spirit for the whole Church ought to haue notice of the same otherwise how can she auoid the familiar society of the partie excommunicated for it is manifest whē Christ did dispute of this thing f Mat. 18.17 that he ment the consistorie or the Ecclesiasticall Senate applying his speach to the custome of his times And the power of Ecclesiasticall iurisdiction was in their power which were called the chiefe rulers of the Synagogue g Mar. 5.22 who did also manage the affaires of particular Churches Examples heereof we haue Ioh. 9.22 h 12.42 16.2 and Paul 2. Cor. 16. saith that it is sufficient that such a man was rebuked not in priuate not publick before the whole Church but of many namely being done in the consistorie Whence it is manifest that all the excommunications of that Antichrist of Rome and all his Hierarchie are in trueth none at all How farre forth may a lawfull conuocation vse this spirituall sword Not at their owne arbitrement or priuate authority but. 1. By a precedent lawfull knowledg 2. Vpon iust causes 3. By the prescript of Gods word 4. In the feare of the Lord. 5. In the name of our Lord Iesus Christ that is Gods name being called on as it beseemeth them who do not regard theit owne worke but the Lords businesse according to his worde and with the power of the Lord a 1 Cor. 5.4 6 with the spirit of meeknesse and with especiall clemencie and charity b Gal 6.9 for that which is vnlawfully and wickedly acted on earth cannot be ratified in heauen Vpon whome ought it to be exercised Vpon blaspheemers enemies of Gods glory his trueth obstinate sinners hereticks and seducers worshippers of Idols Schismaticks or Sectaries periured or faithlesse and on open malefactors as rebels to the admonitions of their superiours murtherers whoremongers vsurers railers drunkards extortioners inordinate liuers and such as are condemned in their owne conscience and after their conscience hath beene conuinced do perseuere in their obstinacie vnbridled vncorrigible despising all Christi●● admonition but present not absent c Mat. 18.17 1 Cor. 5.11 2 Thess 3 1● Tit. 3 11. From what things is the excommunicate person excluded Not only from the participation of the Sacraments for this is only a suspention but from the whole bodie and benefite of the Church and from the ordinarie conuersation speech cohabitation society of life with other mēbers of the Church 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for wee must haue no voluntarie familiar for our minde sake cōmixtion cōsociation or fellowship with any excommunicate person e Rom 16.17 2. Thes 3.14 couple not or consociate not your selues to him 1. Cor. 5.11 But he must be as an Ethnick and publican to vs as Christ doth aduertise vs. Mat. 18.17 neither must we eat with him neither receiue him into our house neither salute him 1. Cor. 5.11 d 2. Ioh. 5.10 but we must fly from him and yet so as our children wife subiects in respect of the magistrate be not exempted from due reuetence least there be a confusion of all neither must they for the offence of the maister of the familie bee accounted as excommunic te prouided that they do not by their conuersation with him giue any assent to his crime As for others they must auoide an excommunicate person Notwithstanding he is not to be depriued of the benefit of the f 1 Cor. 14.2 word by which meanes the offender may bee reclaimed 2. Thess 3 14 if any doe not yeeld obedience to our speech haue no fellowship with him yet saith the Apostle Admonish him as
together in act circumscribed and not circumscribed because these things are contradictorie But contrariwise we retort the argument drawne from omnipotencie God is omnipotent therfore he can bring to passe that we being in earth may partake of the true bodie of Christ being in heauen and therfore we do so though we are vpon earth and so need not a corporall Manducation Is it true which our aduersaries take for granted that Christ when he appeared to Paule in his iourney Act. 9.17 and stood by him in the Castle Act. 23.11 was in bodie both in heauen and on earth together No For it was a heauenly vision as it is said Act. 26.19 Which helpeth nothing the presence of the bodie of Christ in earth For Christ is said to haue talked with Paule not placed in earth but from heauen eyther without a corporall voyce the Lord powerfully imprinting into him the conceipt of speech or by a voyce framed from heauen which came to his cares like thunder And Act. 23.11 Noe man but seeth that it was a nocturnall vision which appeared not to his eyes but to his minde eyther in waking or dreaming But yet for some peculiar and extraordinarie apparitions wee must not depart from the vniuersall rule of faith whereby Christ is beleeued to possesse heauen in his bodie and there to remaine vntil the end of the world Yet notwithstanding we must not denie but that Christ in euerie moment is wheresoeuer and howsoeuer it pleaseth him according to his Maiesty not corporally but spiritually Is hee a manifest denier of the power of God which denieth that by his absolute power he doth bring to passe that the bodie continuing in his propertie may be in many places after another and diuers maner Hee is not yea rather because we denie that God can bring it to passe wee openly affirme the omnipotencie of God For seeing God is so ommipotent and effectuall that he is not contrarie to the truth he can in no manner of wise bring to passe that a thing may together be and not be that the same bodie may remaine in his propertie that is to retaine his dimensions and circumscripton and be the same bodie together and at one time present in many places and separated by a long space betweene Rightly therefore Cyrill Wilt thou grant also to another nature not diuine Book de Trin. 5 besides the diuine nature that it can fill all things and passe through all things and follow in all things No verily Is the contradiction taken away in the diuersitie of respects and of these names if it be said that the bodie of Christ in truth and verie deed is in heauen according to the naturall properties of a true bodie circumscriptiuely locally visibly and after a naturall manner and that it is by the power of God also in truth and in verie deed in many places or euerie where or in the supper but sacramentally inuisibly supernaturally illocally after a celestiall and miraculous manner and if it be said that the nature of Christ in the propertie of his nature is circumscribed and visible but in regard of the vnion vncircumscribed and inuisible In no wise because these distinctions or manners cannot bee prooued out of the scriptures Moreouer all such manners doe not alwaies excuse a contradiction as if one say that the bodie of Christ was dead according to the manner of death and at the same time was aliue according to the manner of life Finally contrarie modi or manners which doe destroy one another when they are put in doe not take away but confirme a contradiction But yet such a diuerse respect cannot bee graunted wherein one and the same thing may bee the same and bee not the same in trueth which is the first lie of the aduersaries neither is a manner to be feined which may take away the essence of a thing Wherefore seeing the bodie of Christ assumed is in act organical Physicall tempered together disposed and finite in his parts it cannot bee in act in many places by any meanes not Organicall vndisposed infinite or in manie planes although it bee adorned with vnspeakeable glorie because God is vnchangeably true neither will hee that an affirmation should be a negation against a principle vnmoueable Quodlibet est aut non est that is euery thing is or is not Whether as the eye hath not the force of seeing in it selfe but by reason of the vnion with the soule and receiueth it in the vnion so the flesh of Christ receiueth not those proper things in it selfe but hath them truely and really in that wonderfull vnion No because things vnlike and in kinde diuers are compared together For the eye is so ordained by nature that it is a naturall proper and necessarie instrument whereby the sensitiue life doth exercise and accomplish her facultie of seeing and without which it cannot bring forth this faculty into effect But the flesh of Christ is so ordained by nature that it is a naturall proper and necessarie instrument whereby the diuine nature alone may shewe forth his omni presence and inuisibilitie and so necessarie that without it the diuine nature in the Act it selfe cannot be omnipresent norinuisible Furthermore the flesh of Christ is not considered in it selfe or out of the vnion seeing that that flesh neither is nor hath beene nor euer shall be out of that vnion Moreouer one nature receiueth not any contrarie thing or diuers in it selfe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is it selfe but it is a thing diuerse farre vnlike to be circumscribed in a place and to be euery where Otherwise wee should say that the humane nature of Christ hath a beginning in it selfe and hath not a beginning in the vnion that it is created in the proprietie of it owne nature and that it is not created in the vnion That it is lesse then the Angels in it owne nature but in the vnion equall to the father finally that it is dead in it selfe and not deade in the vnion or for the vnion or for the cause and respect of the vnion Must wee altogether abandon mans reason and the principles of Philosophie in those things which are affirmed concerning the body of Christ No so farre forth as mans reason beeing made spirituall after Regeneration beareth true witnesse to the creatures and affirmeth true principles concerning things proper to mans bodie For it is written Be yee not like a horse or like a mule which vnderstand not Psal 32.9 besides God is the author of all trueth in Logick Ethicks and Physicks Moreouer Christ after his resurrection appearing to the Disciples when hee would proue his owne bodie to be substantially present he reasoneth from his adioyned visibilitie and palpability and appealeth to the verie senses of the Disciples a Luk. 24.36 Like as from all the accidents of the bread of the Eucharist it is rightly gathered that it is the substance of bread by experiment of all the
INSTITVTIONS OF CHRISTIAN REligion framed out of Gods word and the writings of the best Diuines methodically handled by Questions and Answers fit for all such as desire to know or practise the will of God Written in Latin by WILLIAM BVCANVS Professor of Diuinitie in the Vniuersitie of LAVSANNA And published in English by ROBERT HILL Bachelor in Diuinitie and Fellow of Saint Iohns Colledge in Cambridge for the benefit of our English Nation to which is added in the end the practise of Papists against Protestant Princes PROV 16.16 How much better is it to get wisedome than gold and to get vnderstanding is more to be desired than siluer Printed at London by George Snowdon and Leonell Snowdon 1606. King Dauids Testament to his sonne Salomon ANd thou Salomon my sonne know thou the God of thy father and serue him with a perfect heart and with a willing mind for the Lord searcheth al hearts and vnderstandeth all imaginations of thoughts If thou seeke him he will be found of thee but if thou forsake him he will cast thee off for euer 1. Chron. 28.9 TO THE RIGHT HONORABLE AND hopefull young Lords Robert Deuoreux Earle of Essex sonne in Lawe to the most Honourable Thomas Earle of Suffolke and to Sir William Cecill Knight of the Bathe Lord of Cranborne sonne and heyre to the most worthy Lord Robert Earle of Salisbury grace and Peace RIght Honorable It hath pleased God to giue vs in this Church verie many remarkeable testimonies of his mercie whether we looke to the heauens aboue vs the earth beneath vs our Princes who rule vs our Pastors who teach vs our lawes which command vs or the singular mercies which we haue receiued or the fearefull iudgements which we haue escaped Our heauen is not brasse as it was in Achabs time a 1 K. 17 1 ● our earth is not barren as it was in Pharaohs time b Gen. 41 55 our Princes are not Lions as the princes of Iudah c Zeph 3.3 our Pastors are not wolues as were the shepheards of Israell d Math 7 15 our Lawes which commaund vs are not as the Lawes of Draco and our mercies receiued are Gods mercies our iudgements escaped are mens cruelties Yet of all the testimonies of Gods loue vnto vs this is and ought to be esteemed the greatest that we are come out of Babylon know God in Christ may read the scriptures heare Gods word be partakers of the sacraments pray in a knowne tongue worship the true God and that of mortall and sinfull men we are made the immortal and righteous children of God But because wee are so blinded with the loue of this world that we see not or perceiue not this note of Gods loue therefore the Apostle Iohn setteth an Ecce vpon it and saith behold what loue the father hath giuen vs that we should be called the sons of God e 1 Ioh. 3. ● Behold we therefore not the loue of Sampson to Delila f Iudg. 14.3 for that was a wanton loue nor the loue of Iaakob to Rahel g Gen 29.17 for that was a carnall loue nor the loue of Dauid to Ionathan h 1 Sam 18.3 for that was an humane loue but the loue of God to man the Creator to his Creature a good father to a multitude of prodigall and rebellious children Hee loued vs in our creation for he made vs men but more in our redemption for he mad vs saints he created vs with a word of his mouth he redeemed vs by the bloud of his sonne he created vs whē we were nothing hee redeemed vs when we were worse then nothing he created vs to liue before him on earth he redeemed vs to liue with him in heauen He created vs and so did he others he redeemed vs but did not redeeme others He hath not dealt so with euery nation neither haue the heathen knowledge of his lawes i Psal 147 ●● If there were in vs eyther Nobility of birth or comelines of beautie or correspondence of vertue or aboundance of riches our God might loue like vs for these as men doe affect and follow vs for these But since by discent we are Cananites k, EZ 16.3 by deformitie polluted in our owne bloud l. v. 6 by sin there is none that doth good no not one m Rom. 3 12 that our pouerty is such that we are poore naked and miserable creatures n Reuel 3 1● it is not our old birth but the new birth not our owne beautie but Gods bountie not our vertue but Gods grace not our goods but Gods goodnes by which we become Gods children If I were Right honorable as profound as Paule as eloquent as Apollos as deuout as Dauid and as zealous as the Prophet Elias was I could neither expresse the quantity of this loue it is so great nor the quality of this loue it is of such efficacy By this fauor of God we of seruants become sons o Gal. 4.4 of enemies frinds p Rom. 5.10 of diuorced espoused q Hos 2 20 of prophan priests r Reuel 1.6 of captiues kings ſ Reuel 5.8 of Cananites Israelites t Acts. 11.26 of heathens christians of inheritors of hell heires nay felow heires with Iesus Christ u Rom. 8 17. By this fauor we enioy the forgiuenes of sins peace of conscience ioy in the holy ghost protection of angels the communion of saints audience in praying acceptance in obeying security in life comfort in death and eternal glory after we be dead By this fauor we are written in Gods book receiue a new name incorporated into Christs body clothed with Christs righteousnes indued with Christs spirit and one day shall be partakers of his glory But as Augustine was swallowed vp by the admiration of Gods Maiesty so am I with the consideration of this mercy I say of this mercy which is giuen vs by the father purchased by the son assured by the holy ghost offered in the word sealed in the sacraments apprehended by faith tried by tribulation and though not deserued by vs yet reserued for vs in the highest heauens Is God our father behold our dignity are we his children learne we our duty The consideration of this dignity made Theodosius to thanke God more that he was a christiā then a King Moses to refuse the crowne of Aegypt x Heb. 11.24 Dauid to desire the place of gods doorekeeper y Psal 84.10 and Paul to make a base account of all things in this world z Philip. 3.9 The consideration of this duty made Abell to sacrifice his sheep a Gen. 4.4 b Gen 26. Abraham to sacrifice his son and the Romans to sacrifice thēselues c Rom 12.1 Ioseph to flie adultery d Gen 39.9 the three children to flie idolatry e Dan 3 16 Nehemiah to fly tyranny f Neh 5 15 and all Gods children to abandon impietie
g 1 Ioh. 3 4 Now then If we call him father which without respect of persons iudgeth according to euery mans work let vs passe the time of our dwelling heere in feare knowing that we were not redeemed with corruptible things as siluer and gold from our vaine conuersation receiued by the tradition of the fathers but with the pretious bloud of Christ as af a Lamb vndefiled and without spot h 1 Pet. 1 17 And surely God is our father though Abraham be ignorant of vs saith the Prophet i Isa 63.16 For he begetteth vs by the seed of the word a Iames 1 18 giueth vs a new name b Reuel 2 17 nourceth vs with the milke of the gospell c Hebr 5 12 instructeth vs in true religion d Ier. 31 33 teacheth vs euen ciuill conuersation e Coloss 4 5 prouideth instructors to teach vs more f M●t 28 20 yea he placeth vs in our callings g Gen 2 15 is an example of holines h 1 Pet. 1 16 correcteth vs when we sin i Prov. 3 11 trieth our obedience k Gen. 22.2 exerciseth our patience l Iob. 1 16 deferreth our petitions m Math 15 23 and pitieth vs vs when we be in misery n Psal 103.13 Hee as a good father prouideth for vs in this life o 1 Pet 5.7 protecteth vs against wrongs p 2 K. 6.16.17 is sory when we sinne q Psal 81.13 glad whē we do wel r Prov 10 1 admonisheth vs of dangers ſ Reuel 18.4 beareth with our wants t Psal 103 9 10 heareth our cries u Ioh 15 16 and for our sakes is good vnto others x Gen. 39.3 To conclude this he loueth vs all but most of all such as feare him most y Gen 6.8 he is not ashamed of vs in our poorest estates z Hebr 15 19 he blesseth vs as Iaakob did his children a Gen 49 2 and like good father Abraham all that he hath belōgeth vnto vs b Gen 25 5 God is your father you see your dignity men thinke it a great dignity to be borne of the bloud royal to descend of ancient families to be blazoned by gentry to stand before princes to be honored and enriched in this world to cōmand many to obey few to be called the sons of nobles and so it is indeed But say that we could draw our pedegrees not from the conquest but from the flood yet we might as well descend of cursed Cham as of blessed Sem. But if we can draw our pedegree from the line of Christ it is better then to deriue it from the line of princes To this end Iuuenall said well Tota licet veteres exornent vndique cerae Atria nobilitas sola est atque vnica virtus Though all thine house about with ancient armes be set As sole and sure Nobilitie see that thou vertue get And better another In relligione vera virtus In virtute vera nobilitas True vertue is in pietie In vertue true nobilitie But Prudentius best of all as I once writ to an honorable family * To the Honorable House of the Mon●ag●●● Generosa Christi secta nobilitat vir●t Cui quisquis seruit ille verè est nobilis He noble is that comes of Christ his race Who serues this Lord he surely is not base Wherfore as Ambrose said to Auxentius so giue me leaue to say to you saith he Quid honorificentius quam vt imperator Ecclesiae filius dicatur What honor can be greater then that the Emperor should be called the son of the Church Of the Church nay say I that noble men should be called the sons of God I haue spoken of our dignity but what is our duty by this we must learne to admire this mercy of God the father to adore this loue in God the sonne to keepe this assurance in god the holy ghost and that the more fauors he hath shewed to vs the more we are indebted to him By this we must learne to haue this adoption written in our hearts sealed in our consciences to esteeme it the greatest blessing in the world By this we must learne to loue him who thus loued vs for amante non amato nihil est miserius and to loue all such as belong vnto God for he that loueth him which begate loueth also him who is begottē a 1 Iohn 5. In a word are we Gods childrē we must loue his house not sell our inheritance desire to bee with him pray onely vnto him depend vpon his prouidence be patient with his corrections content with his allowance and as glad to see his great name honored as we would be sory to see the Kings name abused And to conclude this point as Menedemus tutor to a kings son said vnto him Remember that thou art the kings son so say I Remember that you are the King of Kings sonnes so that you must neither think speak nor do any thing but that which becomes the sons of God I had almost forgotten the greatest duty we liue at this day among pseudocatholick professors who loue an Idoll more thē God the Pope more then the King Italy more then England who vse all equiuocatory means to draw disciples after them are we sons therfore depart frō amongst thē b 2 Cor 6.17 18 saith the Apostle separate your selues touch none vncleane thing and I will receiue you yea I will be a father vnto you and ye shall be my sons and daughters saith the Lord God almighty Let vs therfore separate light from darknes God from an Idoll the Israelites from the Cananites the pretious from the vile c Ier. 15.15 the beleeuer from infidels and Protestants from Papists Let them returne vnto vs but let not vs returne vnto them who in superstition are heathenish in tradition Iewish and in treason diuelish I am the bolder right honourable to write of this argument because I doe write vnto the sons of nobles that therby I may stirre vp your pure minds to vse all diligēce to become as great by grace as you are by nature as Honorable in the Church as you are in the common wealth that as you are the children of mighty men on earth so you may be the children of the Almighty God in heauen If I did present this booke to some great Counsellor of State I would haue vsed the art of Brachyography sh●rt vvriting ●l●ng speach but since I am bold to make choice of you who as yet liue vnder the coūsel of others I hope it wil not be offēsiue to vse this Polylogye Habet hoc proprium generosus animus saith Seneca vt excitetur ad honesta It is proper to a noble mind to be excited to honest actiōs Whē Luke did so it was wel liked of noble Theophilus d Acts ●1 ● whē Paul did so it was wel
aproued of the noble mē of Berea e Act. 17.11 ● when Daniel did so it was wel takē of that great Nebucadnetzar though it were to the breaking off of his sins f Dan. 4.24 How necessary it is for young noble men to be stirred vp to true nobilitie Isocrates shewes by his Oration to Demonicus Agapetus by his precepts to Iustinian Tully by his Offices to his son Plutarch by his institution of children Pythagoras by his golden verses Phocylides by his pithy sentences Sir VValter Mildmay by his coūselto his son Solomon by the prouerbs taught by his Parents and our noble King Iames by his booke to Prince Henry Remember therfore my Lords that you are called Nobiles as it were noscibiles because others must see wherin you excell and that thē you shal be noble indeed if as Chrysostom saith you do disdain to be seruants to sins as saith Apuleius When to the nobility of birth you adioyne also the nobility of life The nobilitie of vertue it is your owne the nobility of birth it is your ancestors If you be honored for the one thank your predecessors if for the other ascribe it to your selues If you consider your Honor many bad persons are partakers of as great if you looke vnto vertue it is appropriate only to the good your Honor without vertue is a Iewel of it selfe your Honor with vertue will be as a Iewel set in gold your Honor it makes you esteemed of men your vertue it wil cause you to be respected of God By your Honor you may glory in your parents by your vertue your parents shal glory in you By your honor you shal command many by your vertue you shal command your selues Summa apud Deum nobilitas est saith Ierome clarū esse virtutibus Before God the soueraigne nobility is to be famous for vertue To stir you vp to this I need not to cōmend vnto you the examples of kings before Christ Emperors in the primitiue Church many heathen gouernors who excelled in vertue looke vpon that king vnder whom you do liue vpon that admirable prince before whom you do stand and you shall see that the table of the one is a schoole of Diuinity the familie of the other a court of piety Besids consider I beseech you that most noble Earle Salisbury who though by nature he be father but to one yet in affection and tuition he is a father to you both doth not he build his religion vpon the sacred grounds of faith hope His ansvvere to certain scandalous papers in the pretious bloud of his Redeemer without presuming vpō any particular merits doth hee not promise Nec Deo nec patriae nec patri patriae deesse is he not an Hushay to our Dauid against rebellious Absolon g 2 Sam. 15 37 a Mordecai to our Ahashuerosh againg Bightana and Teresh h Hester 6 2 an Antipater to our Alexander to watch when he sleepeth i Antipater vigilat a Zopyrus to our Darius for the subduing of Babylon k Herod L 3 and a Zabud to our Solomon euen the Kings friend l 1 King 4 5. Is hee not a star in our heauen to enlighten many a tree in our ortyard to shadow many and such an eysore to our euill sighted blindfolded aduersaries that next to the extinguishing the light of our Israel they foolishly forewarne him that they seeke his life But the soule of that worthy Earle shal be boūden in the būdle of life with the Lord his God when the soule of his enimies shall be cast out as out of the middle of a sling m 1 Sam 25 29 Remēber him O Lord according to all the goodnesse which he hath done for this people n Neh 5 19 As therefore Alexander was moued by the vertues of Philip Scipio the lesser by Scipio Africanus Octauian by Caesar and Pyrrus by Achilles so let the examples of Princes in times past of gouernours in this present age and especially of your noble progenitors be glasses for you to behold your selues in that whatsoeuer they haue gotten it may be reteined by you if any thing hath bin lost by you it may be recouered And if it please god that the fruit of your age be like to the sap of your youth Si non sit viti●m in radice non erit in fructu si fons pur●●s etiam ri●●ls the streams of your manhood be answerablie current to the fountaine of your minority I doubt not but the generation to come shall as greatly reioyce at the possession of your honours as they are much cheered in the hope of your vertues I do obserue my Lords though what can a man of my parts and pouerty obserue that many great men in our kingdome haue bin for a while like vnto the great tree which Nebucadnetzar saw in the Prophecy of Daniel o Dan 4.6 but either by vndermining Iesuits or discontented followers or Parasititall seruants or enuiing of superiours or desire ef greatnesse or seeking of reuenge or excesse of life the roots of these trees haue beene so stubbed vp that the place of their aboad is no where to be founde The Lord grant that you may take heed of these things especiallie in your youth that we who see you now as Ioseph and Beniamin may see you hereafter as Dauid Ionathan so this twofold cable shall neuer be broken Quò vosfata vocant seu quò vos fata vocabunt Sint semper vobis prospera fata precor What Destinies you present haue or haue you after may That these to you be prosperous my Lords I humbly pray Now albeit you haue many liuing libraries to take counsell of yet since books are as one saith muti magistri trusty coūselors it is good for you to take aduise from them By them you may confer with the prophets speak with the Apostles though Christ himselfe left nothing in writing yet by them you may read the Sermōs of Christ By these you may cal a council of holy Fathers wise Philosophers eloquent Orators acute Logitians learned Historians great Mathematitians to resolue any euen the greatest doubt In the first place I cōmend vnto you the word of god which is not a dumb doctor a nose of wax a Shipmans hose a dead letter an Inky Gospel as our aduersaries would haue it but it is a directer of our waies a comfort in calamity a searcher of the heart mighty in operation a lanthorn to our life a counsellor to the Christian statesmen of the world Habetis oracula Dei saith Chrysostome ne moremini aliā doctorē nemo docebit vos quemadmodū illa Haue you the Oracles of God care not for other teachers none will instruct you better then they But amongst many diuines which are worthy your reading giue me leaue to commend vnto you this Christian Institution The order of this author is methodical manifest setting down
flesh of Christ hath power to quicken because it is the flesh of that person who is God the obedience of the man Christ doth iustifie because it is the obedience of that person who is God the bloud of Christ redeemes the Church because it is the bloud of God Act. 20.28 Of the Phrases What is the communication of proprieties IT is called of the Grecians 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which cannot well be englished and it is not the effusion of the proprieties of one nature into the other or a mutuall confusion of proprieties but the attributing by Synecdoche a part for the whole or an affirmation one of the other whereby because in Christ the two natures and one person is * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dial. 3. one thing and another and not one person and another that which is proper to one nature in Christ is attributed not to the other nature but to the person taking the name of one of the natures whether it be the diuine or humane As Theodoret saith Those things which be common to the person are made proper to the natures by reason of the identitie of the person as Damascene saith and the affinitie of the natures one towards another and because there is but one person Orthod fid lib. 3. cap. 3. 4. Or else it is such a manner of predication whereby those things which be proper to the natures are indifferently attributed to the person of Christ which is but one and that because Christ in his two natures is both to wit perfect God and perfect man to whom therefore those things are truly and indeed attributed as well which are proper to God as those which be proper to man Therefore it is well and truly said God or else the Son of God was borne of the Virgin Marie suffered was crucified and God purchased vnto himselfe the Church with his owne bloud 1. Cor. 2.8 Act. 20.28 Not simply principally and by himselfe as he is God but by accident and in another respect or in regard of another thing because that which is proper to one nature namely to be conceiued borne crucified to die is not attributed to his diuinitie but to the person taking the name of one namely the diuine nature For this word the Sonne of God or God which is the subiect of the proposition is the Concrete and not the Abstract and signifieth not the diuine nature but the person who is God and man Therefore it is well said The Sonne of man or Christ man is eternall almightie al-present saueth raiseth the dead giueth eternall life And Ioh. 31.13 No man ascendeth into heauen but he that commeth downe from heauen both in respect of the vnion seeing that the selfe same person is both man and God for as God by reason of the vnitie doth account those things which belong to the humane nature proper to himselfe saith Cyril of the incarnation of the onely begotten cap. 26 so as he is man by reason of the vnion doth account those things which belong to the diuine nature to be proper to it selfe and also because the Sonne of man is a word Concrete which signifieth the person of Christ being but one consisting of the diuine and humane nature and therefore whole Christ is euery where present but not all that is in Christ Totus Christus non totum Christi est vbique On the contrarie it is wickedly said that the diuinitie of Christ was borne of the Virgin suffered and that the humanitie of Christ is eternall euery where present almightie for the diuinitie is a word abstract which simply signifieth the diuine nature in Christ which is most free from all manner of suffering Now the predication of diuerse natures by reason of the hypostaticall vnion is of no force but in those things which are signified as whole and perfect Supposita for as we do not vse to say the bodie is the soule or the man is the soule so neither do we say this God Christ is the bodie of Christ or the soule of Christ but onely God is man Is the communication of proprieties verball onely or reall It is a true and reall speech because the person of whom by the trope Synecdoche as well the diuine as the humane either names or proprieties or effects are indifferently and equally affirmed containeth all those things in it selfe truly and indeed which do agree to very God and very man those things which be diuine as he is God those also which be humane as the same is man but not in respect of both natures but according to the one and the other as in the same place Cyrill teacheth For then should be brought in the Eutychian heresie of the confounding of the natures or proprieties and it should cease to be a speech by Synecdoche But those titles which belong to the office of Redemption are they to be attributed to the natures seuerally a sunder or to the person To the person as Christ is a Mediator Pastor Priest according to both natures although each of them in that worke retaineth his owne 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 proper efficacie or operation What is the effect of that personall vnion The bestowing of gifts whereby the humane nature in the person of Christ is adorned and whereby it excelleth all other creatures in wisedome goodnesse holinesse power maiestie and glorie which the Fathers call the Deifying of the flesh the Schoolemen Habituall grace of the communion of proprieties which is mutuall one of another and the reciprocation of the names altogether distinct How manifold is the state of Christ Twofold one of humiliation whereby he willingly vndergoing the burdens reproches and punishments of our nature did humble himselfe to the death of the crosse the Diuinitie in the meane while according to Irenaeus resting or hiding it selfe that he might be crucified and die The other of exaltation whereby after his death his humane nature did lay aside all the infirmities of his humane nature but not the essentiall properties and was wonderfully exalted aboue all creatures vnto most great honor yet not in any case matched and equalled to the diuine nature of Christ a Phil. 2.7.9 What are the doctrines contrary to this The 1. heresie of Macedonius and Valentinus who affirmed that Christ brought with him a celestiall body from heauen as also of Apelles who said his bodie was ayrie his flesh starlike and that he passed from the virgin as water from a pipe 2. Of the Manichees who fained vnto him an imaginarie bodie 3. Of Apollinaris who denied that Christ did assume a reasonanable soule but that his Diuinitie was vnto him in stead of his mind 4. Of Eunomius who affirmed Christ to be a meere man and that he was called the sonne of God by adoption and of Ebion who said that Christ was borne by humane generation 5. Of Nestorius who taught that as there be two natures in Christ so there are two persons and that
the Diuinitie is present with the humanitie by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 circumstance and combination but not by personall vnion Therfore he denied that Marie was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the mother of God or brought forth God and affirmed that man not God was crucified of the Iewes 6. Eutyches heresie contrary to the former for he taught that the humane nature after the vnion was endued with the proprieties of the Diuinitie 7. Of the Manichees who auouched that Christ had but one onely will not two a diuine and humane will 8. Of the Vbiquitaries who attribute to the humanitie of Christ the essentiall properties of the Diuinitie altogether forgetting that saying He that taketh away the proprieties taketh away the nature and on the contrary He that attributeth the proprieties attributeth the nature and of whatsoeuer the Essence cannot be affirmed no more can the essentiall proprieties thereof be affirmed of the same Of the office of Christ How manifold is the office of Christ THreefold Propheticall Priestly Kingly as it is expressed Heb. 2.10 What is his Propheticall office It is that office whereby he hath reuealed to mankind the Gospell that is the secret counsell of the Father concerning the redemption of mankind by the Word by the holy Ghost by the Sacraments both by himselfe as also by the Ministers of the word Ioh. 1.18 Ephes 4.10.11 Shew some testimonies Deut. 18.18 I will raise a Prophet like you c. Esa 61.1 He hath sent me that I should preach the Gospell to the poore Math. 17.5 This is that my welbeloued Son in whom I am well pleased heare him For this cause he is called a Pastor a Esa 40..1 John 10.11 the publisher of peace b Zach. 9.10 Ephes 2.17 the most faithfull witnesse of God c Iohn 3.32 Reu. 1.5 which office he doth execute vntill the end of the world d Ephes 4.11 What is his Priestly office It is that whereby he is Mediator betweene God and man or that whereby he hath set himselfe a Mediator betweene God and men e 1. Tim. 25. Heb. 11.24 which agreeth to no man saue to Christ alone f Heb. 2.17 How many parts be there of this office Two his satisfaction whereby he fulfilled the law g Mat 5.17 Rom. 10.4 and paid the ransome for the sins of the world h Mat. 20.28 In respect of which part of his office he is called a Redeemer i Mat. 20.28 Gal. 3.13 and a Sauior k Esa 25.8.9 53.4.5.6 Iohn 3 17 1. Pet. 2.24 and a Lambe or a sacrifice l Esa 53.7 Ioh. 1.29.36 Reuel 13.8 And his intercession whereby Christ doth instantly desire that his sacrifice may continually preuaile with God his Father for the reconciliation of his elect m Rom. 8.24 Heb 7.25 According to which nature is Christ a Mediator and a Priest According to neither of them asunder but according to both his diuine and humane ioyntly together n Gen. 3.15 22.18 Dan. 9.17 2. Cor. 5.15 Heb 4.15 9.14 1. Because he is in one and the same person the same God man 2. Because he was after the order of Melchisedech without father as man and without mother as God 3. Because he must be partaker of them both that he might reconcile God to man and man to God as Irenaeus saith It was necessary by reason of his habitation with both that he should reduce both into loue and concord and procure that God should receiue man and that man should be restored to God 4. Because the workes of the Mediator are of him that is both God and man that God might accept them 5. Because none could satisfie Gods iustice but God none ought but man Was Christ Mediator before his Incarnation He was because in the foreknowledge predestination and acceptance of God the two natures were reputed as vnited and with him things done and to be done present and to come are all one Thus Heb. 13.8 Iesus Christ is to day yesterday and the same for euer So 1. Pet. 1.20 And as the Lambe is said to be slaine from the beginning of the world Apoc. 13. so the prayers then powred out for the Church in Gods acceptation may be said to be made How doth the Sonne make intercession to the Father Surely as a person but yet as man but so as that the dignitie of those prayers issue from the excellencie of his Diuinitie which in Christ is personally vnited with his humanitie Have you any pregnant testimonie concerning the Priesthood of Christ Psal 110.4 The Lord hath sworne and it shall not repent him Thou art a Priest for euer after the order of Melchisedech who was a type of Christ a Heb. 7.3 as were Aaron also and Isaac b Gen. 22.6.9 May the Ministers of the Gospell be called Priests They may but onely in two respects 1. Because they together with others are ingrafted into Christ and so farre forth as they be true Christians 2. Because they teach the Gospel and sacrifice men themselues and offer them vp a liuing sacrifice vnto God by the Gospell For this cause Paul testifieth of himselfe that he had offered a sacrifice when he had sacrificed the Gentiles by the Gospel that they might be an acceptable sacrifice vnto God being sanctified by the holy Ghost Rom. 15.16 Yet in no place in the new Testament the name of Priest is attributed peculiarly to the Ministers of the Gospell because Christ hath no copartners of his Priesthood What is the Kingly office of Christ It is that whereby he doth according to both natures wittingly and willingly moderate rule and gouerne the whole world Shew some plaine testimonies concerning this office Psal 2.6 He hath set his King vpon his holy mountaine Mat. 28.18 All power is giuen me in heauen and in earth Ioh. 13.3 All things are giuen me of my Father And for this cause he is called the eternall King c Esa 9.7 Psal 45.7 Luke 1.33 the King of righteousnesse d Heb. 7.2 the King of Kings e Reu. 7.2 How manifold is the administration of this office It is two-fold in this world Generall or powerfull whereby he rules all creatures by his power Speciall or of grace whereby he doth in speciall manner and peculiarly rule defend and gouerne his Church and doth enrich it here on earth and glorifie it in heauen In which respect he is also properly called a King f Psal 2.9 1. Because he hath redeemed his Church which Satan had inuaded g Psal 20. 2. Because he hath vanquished the prince of darknesse 3. Because he doth defend and make blessed all those that flie vnto him Who are citizens of this kingdome and what be the lawes The citizens are Christians so called of the King Act. 11.26 1. Pet. 2.3 the lawes are the word of God the enemies are sinne Satan hell death and the rewards are the things of this
158.5 He spake and they were made he commanded and they were created that is God but spake the word or commaunded and the things which were not before now haue their being And that God created all things the Apostle sheweth Heb. 11.3 of things which did not appeare that is of no matter that appeared before Also this particle of nothing is thus described 1. Machab. 7.28 Behold the heauen and the earth and vnderstand that God made them of nothing where the Greeke Interpreter reades it thus that he made them of things which had no being And so Paule speaketh Rom. 4.17 He calleth those things which are not as though they were and Prou. 8.24 When the deepes were nothing I was begotten saith Wisedome 3. When as it was Moses his purpose to describe the first originall of all things And the beginning of things is the bringing of them from no being to a being it followeth that all things were created of nothing or of those things which were not What can the creation of the world be proued certainely by humane reasons The eternitie of the world may clearely be confuted because that if the world should want both beginning and ending the world should be euen God himselfe then there should be many things infinite in act all the parts of the world should be eternall and immutable For as Damascene saith Whatsoeuer is created is mutable and that onely which is vncreated is immutable A man may also know euen by the testimonie of nature it selfe that the world had a beginning But yet by faith alone we do certainely know that the world was made of nothing Heb. 11.3 or that it was so made in sixe dayes as it was as also by the same we know that one day it shall haue an end Therefore Moses doth not vse philosophicall demonstrations but simply reporteth the matter as he had receiued it by the faithfull tradition of the Fathers but especially by the instinction of the holy Ghost Now what was created 1. The heauen and the earth in which two as in a generall proposition Moses doth comprehend all things both visible and inuisible a Col. 1.16 because b Gen. 1.1 these two be the first and most principall parts of the whole world For first vnder the name of heauen he vnderstandeth all that space which is betweene the earth and the circle of the Moone which naturall Philosophers call the region of the elements As Gen. 7.17 The windowes of heauen were opened that is of the ayre and hereupon we reade the foules of heauen c Gen. 1.30 6.7 2. All those celestiall spheres together with their starres both fixed and wandring which make that firmament which the Philosophers call the skie or celestiall region being the distance from the Moone to the skie or the new sphere inuented by Astrologers 3. The place of the Blessed or Paradise or that heauen into which Christ ascended and by a Metonymie also the Angels themselues All these three heauens the Apostle comprehendeth 2. Cor. 12.2 when he saith that he was taken vp into the third heauen that is into the place of the Blessed which place is aboue all those heauens which we see In which God is said to haue prepared his throne for himselfe and in way of excellencie to haue his dwelling and which is called the seate of God Psal 103.9 And is called of Deuines * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Olympus as it were altogether shining and * Empyreū fierie in regard of the qualitie because it is altogether light and shining Which heauen it selfe God did also create of nothing as the Apostle teacheth Heb. 11.10 of which citie the maker and framer is God Now vnder the name of the earth he vnderstandeth the Earth the waters and all those things which are contained in them Whereupon Aristotle thus defineth the world by the parts of it lib. de mundo The world is a frame consisting of heauen and of earth and of the natures which are cōprehended in them And then by causes The world is called this order of the whole the frame preserued of God by God How was the creation of the world brought to passe 1. By bringing foorth of the matter or of the seminarie of the whole world made of nothing the first day which is properly called Creation 2. By giuing a forme vnto the same and all this was done by the very commandement of God in a moment of time For he did but say a Gen. 1.3.6.9 Be there or Let there be this or that and as soone as he had spoken this or that was made What kind of matter was that which God brought foorth of nothing in the beginning 1. It was in regard of substance partly earthie partly watrie and partly slimie which is expressed by the name of Earth and Slime and Waters 2. In regard of the quantitie it was exceeding great and as it were a Chaos without a bottome For it was a rude vnformed and indigested heape in respect of the formes after following or as Moses calleth it Tohu and Bohu that is emptie and voide rawe and impolished which the seuentie Greeke Interpreters of the old Testament call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the Philosophers called Chaos 3. In regard of the qualitie it was darke and obscure that is void of all light vertue and efficacie ouer which houered not any wind or ayre which as yet were not made but the spirit of the Lord of the which the Angell speaketh to Marie Luk. 1.35 euen like vnto an henne when she sitteth vpon her egges and sustained all that whole masse and cherished it and prepared it to receiue all formes out of which the visible heauens and all the elements were produced and framed by the power of the word of God But those things which are not seene were made immediatly of nothing out of which also the light was brought the first day as the Apostle speaketh God who commaunded the light to shine out of darknesse 2. Cor. 4.6 But what was the information or framing of the world That whereby God fitted a fit and conuenient forme for that matter which was made of nothing by means of which the world did truly and indeed begin to be and to be called the world By what meanes did God giue that matter a forme By distinguishing and adorning of it By distinguishing when as God separated the light from the darknesse whereupon came the making and course of the day by the presence of that light and of the night by the absence of that light And the first naturall day was the space of foure and twentie houres or a night and a day consisting of a day artificiall and a night and tooke his beginning from the euening or the night going before Whereas the artificial day beginneth at Sunne rising vnto Sunne setting Now that light seemeth to haue
the plants They are sprouts brought out of the earth being tilled by no man but hauing receiued from God power to grow to the end of the world and without any seede receiued into her neither helped of the Sun nor raine but onely by vertue of the word of God both in the beginning with flowers fruites and seeds as now it comes to passe in time of Autumne which now by vsing the second causes plowing sowing the Sunne Moone raine all which notwithstanding be in the hand of God d Mat. 6.30 1. Cor. 3.7 are brought forth successiuely according to their kind which are and liue onely both for meate as also for medicine and delight and the manifold vse of the liuing creatures e Gen. 1.29 2.9 And three are both herbes and trees created the third day wherein also these waters below which couered the earth were gathered together into one certaine place f Gen. 1.11.12 13. To what end were the Sunne Moone and the Starres in heauen created 1. To this purpose that they might be receptacles and as it were vessels or wagons to carie abroade that light which was created in the first day to put a difference betweene light and darknesse day and night 2. For signes daies times that is that they might signifie vnto vs many things to come raines windes heate cold drought and sundrie seasons g Iob 38.31.32 Amos 5.8 and that they might be significations of the anger or mercie of God h Ios 10.13 2. King 20.11 Luke 21.25 and that by their motion they might both make and distinguish artificiall daies moneths yeares seasons and courses of times as the Spring Sommer Autumne and Winter for the great good of liuing creatures and the seruice of men i Deut. 4 9. Psal 104.20.22.23 Mat. 5.45 3. That by a certaine vertue giuen vnto them of God they might affect the bodies of the elements by making them warme moist drie cold namely by the approching of the Sunne vnto certaine starres by which meanes are caused raine droughts heate cold and humours are increased for the cōferring of life for generation and for the perfecting of all things which pertaine vnto this present life k Job 38.33 Whereupon it is said in Hos 2.21 The heauen shall heare the earth and the earth shall heare the corne And this adorning of the heauen was made the fourth day l Gen. 1.14.15 16.17.18.19 Whether can things to come be foreknowne and foretold by the starres Indeed such things may which come to passe by the motion of the starres by their situation and position by the necessarie course of nature or naturally and ordinarily as the eclipses of the Moone or the Sun faire weather or tempests droughts raine winds snow heate cold and such like And probably those things which for the most part are wont to follow the motion of the starres as kinds of diseases barrennesie of the earth dearth of victuals and such like but onely in generall and not in particular m Mat. 16.2 neither yet as of their owne proper causes but onely as of signes Also physicall passions which follow the diuerse temperatures of the humours of the body because euery one followeth the disposition of his nature But not anie of those things which depend vpon the free will of man nor such as proceed from the meere goodwill and pleasure of God as those which belong either to saluation or damnation as also those things which we vse to place in the number of things contingent as good successe or bad successe which the Lord distributeth as it pleaseth him The reason is because neither are all the stars knowne of vs neither are the influences of those which we know vnderstood of vs neither can we perfectly obserue the moments of times wherein anie man is conceiued or borne and we see that the nature and disposition of twinnes is most contrarie And lastly because God doth moderate the starres and those things which he portendeth by them euen at his owne will and pleasure a Prou. 27.1 and Iames. 4.14 We know not what shall be to morrow But if anie do foretell and it so falleth out it either cometh to passe contingently or else by the reuelation of the diuell Therefore that iudiciall part of Astrologie as they call it or prognosticating which searcheth out what shall befall a man this or that yeare or day what shall come to passe to a man well or ill is vaine and vngodly and by no meanes to be tollerated in the Church of God b Deut. 18.19 Ier. 10.2 Act 1.17 Ioh. 21.22 The first Councell at Toledo Canon 21. If any man thinke we are bound to beleeue his Astrologie or Mathematicks let him be accursed Is it a sound opinion to thinke that the starres haue soules or that they be liuing creatures Yea rather it is impious because it tends to the vpholding of their error which worshipped the starres offered sacrifice vnto them c 2. Kin. 23.5 Ier. 7.17 44 19. and because none of the faculties or operations of the soule as vegetatiue sensitiue intellectiue can agree to a celestiall bodie Why did God place the creation of the starres betweene the creation of plants and beasts To the end he might shew that though ordinarily there doth concurre the Sunne with his motion and light as also other starres to the generation of plants and beasts yet the generation of things doth not simply proceed from the Sunne and the starres but from God sith that euen before the starres were created he commanded all plants with their fruites to be brought out of the earth And before the creation of beasts he would in great wisedome first create the Sunne and the starres which might giue light to the earth because that beasts aboue all things stand in need of light What are liuing Creatures Things created of God which haue their being liue and haue sense or else they be substances indued with an instrumentall bodie which haue besides the soule whereby they liue sense and power to moue themselues from place to place Whence were liuing creatures brought foorth Some out of the waters as fishes which are also called creeping creatures because they haue no feete which also haue no lungs and therefore breath onely by their gils and birds which are feathered winged twofooted although they seeme to be created of the earth d Deut. 2.10 and haue respiration and a voice which were made the fift day e Gen. 1.20.22.23 Some of the earth which liue vpon the earth whereof Moses maketh three kinds of beasts which be helpful vnto man some way as are cattell which liue by grasse not by flesh horses oxen sheepe and which may be tamed liue about the house as Elephants Camels Harts Creeping things which haue no feete or very short ones wherewith they be a little caried aboue the earth And beasts which be wild and liue by flesh as Lions Bears
made Psal 104.4 Who makest thine Angels spirits and thy ministers a flaming fire And in this fourth signification we vse the word Angel here purposing to speake first of Gods Angels and then in order of the wicked Angels Whence had Angels their beginning From God who created them of nothing and that through Christ Coloss 1.16 By whom al things were made whether in heauen or earth things visible and inuisible whether they be thrones or dominations principalities or powers I say all things were made by him and for his sake Are Angels without all matter or not They are not altogether and indeed without matter as neither is the soule of man for God alone is without matter For there is nothing created which is not also compounded either by natural composition as consisting of matter and forme or else metaphysicall namely of the essence or of the act and the power Yet because they do not consist of any corporall matter which is palpable and subiect to the sight but rather spirituall altogether and as they say in the schooles onely of the power and the act they are said to be without matter But God alone is a power or pure Act as Aristotle said verie well in the 11. booke of his Metaphysiks chap. 7. But when were the Angels created Not before the world For onely the Sonne of God was before the world Whence it followeth that they were created in the beginning of all things but in what day they were created it cannot sensibly be defined but onely it may probably be gathered by the historie of Moses that they were created the first day when the heauens wherin they dwell were created whereupon they be called the Angels of heauen a Math 24.36 Gal. 18. The cause why Moses concealed the creation of Angels when he recited the creation of all other things created is this that he purposed to apply and fit his narration to the capacitie of the common people and of the ruder sort and therfore only to set downe briefly the creation of things visible Christ saith Math. 18.10 that the Angels do alwayes behold the face of his Father therefore they haue bene alwayes The aduerbe alwayes doth not signifie eternitie or a thing without beginning but the continuance of their appearing before his Father for the seruice of the godly which began euen from the beginning of the world which the Greeke text doth more fully expresse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to wit which is vnderstood at all times What is an Angell It is as Damascene saith lib. 2. cap. 5. a spirituall or intellectuall substance alwayes moueable of its owne power without a bodie ministring vnto God according vnto grace and in nature immortall But the Apostle comprehending the nature and office of good Angels defineth them thus Hebr. 1.14 They are ministring spirits sent forth for the seruice of those who shall be heires of saluation Are the Angels substances really and truly subsisting They are substances because those things are attributed to them in Scripture which can agree to nothing else but to a substance really subsisting as to stand in the presence of God and to praise him some of them are said to haue fallen and other some of them to haue continued in the truth Further to haue appeared after diuerse maners yea taking vnto them bodies and to haue manifested them selues by sundrie effects Now actions are properly of substances that is of those things onely which haue their true subsisting And therefore looke how many Angels there be there be so many sundrie Angelicall essences subsisting seuerally euen as there be diuers men How were the Angels created All of them good because Gen. 1.31 Whatsoeuer God had made was exceeding good although some of them fell a Isa 14.12 and continued not in the truth And they also were good and created in the truth b John 8.44 And Iude in the sixt verse saith that they kept not their first estate but left their owne habitation Are the Angels mutable or immutable In regard of their substance they be incorruptible c Mat. 22.30 because they are without all matter but in respect of the power of God as they were made of nothing so they may be brought vnto nothing again if God should take away his hand Psalme 104.20 But in regard of that estate wherin they now are they cannot be changed by means of the grace will and decree of God although of their owne nature they be mutable as well to that which is good as to that which is euill For whatsoeuer is created the same is mutable saith Damascene And God himselfe speaketh thus of himselfe I am your God and change not Mal. 3.6 What is the reason that some of the Angels falling from the truth others continued in grace and truth The nearest and immediate cause is the goodnesse of the will of the Angels themselues wherein God had created them at the beginning The mediate or superior cause was the free fauor of God whereby their will was holpen that they were inabled to will and could will to persist in the truth and so indeede did continue whilest that others to whom this grace was not communicated not willing to persist and continue fell from the truth by their owne default Phil. 3.8 God worketh in you both to will and to do But the supreme and highest cause of all is the eternall firme and immutable decree of God and his good pleasure proceeding from his wisedome whereby he elected and predestinated some to be made partakers of his grace and to perseuere and reiected the other of his owne iust pleasure for his owne glorie 1. Timoth. 5.21 I charge thee saith the Apostle in the sight of God and the Lord Iesus Christ and of the elect Angels If they be elect then some of them be elect not all of them Can those then which continued in the truth fall from the same and so fall into sinne No because they are truly happie seeing they do euer behold the face of their heauenly Father Mat. 18.10 yet not by nature but by grace and the blessing of God for Christs sake But seeing they can no more sinne nor become miserable do they not cease to haue freedome of will No for whatsoeuer they will they will it freely Moreouer they are more free now then before then they had power to sinne and not to sinne now they are so free from sinne that they cannot sinne and so free from miserie that they cannot now become miserable any more for they are made most holy and also most happie What names are giuen to the Angels Of their nature they are called spirits because of their spirituall essence For Angell is a name of office Spirit of nature Augustine They are called also shining starres or morning starres a Iob. 3.8.7 because they are of a most pure cleare and shining nature The sonnes of God not by essence or nature as that onely begotten
his Angels charge of thee that they keepe thee in all thy wayes least thy foot should dash against a stone a Gen. 14.7 Exod. 33.2 Psal 34.8 and by defending their life from their enemies and from all dangers b 2. King 6.17 Act. 12.8.11 or else by executing Gods iudgements against the enemies of the Church in the behalfe of the elect as we may gather out of Gen. 19.10 2. Kin. 19.35 Act. 12.23 Also by suggesting into the mindes of the godly holy cogitations and by mouing of them and furthering of them to euery good thing c Act. 10.4.5 for the good Angels neuer put into our mindes any thing contrary to the law of God d Gal. 1.8 3.9 Act. 7.53 Luk. 1.19.20 Act. 1.11 2. Kin. 1.3 Also by helping them and comforting of them e Gen. 16.7 2. Kin. 1.13 Act. 27.23.24 Againe in the time of death whilest that they do attend vpon the faithfull in the very pangs of death and so carry their soules into the ioyes of heauen as is cleare in the example of Lazarus f Luke 16.22 Lastly in the end of the world when they shall gather together the bodies of all the faithfull that being vnited againe to their soules they may rise againe to life g Mat. 24.31 Mat. 13.41 And they shall seperate the wicked from among the iust and shall cast them into a fornace of fire and shall leade these into the kingdome of heauen Haue particular men or countreys and Cities some one good and certaine Angell appointed to defend them and an euill Angell to tempt them It may be gathered from the words of Christ that ordinarily euery elect child of God hath some one certaine good Angell appointed of God to keepe them Math. 18.10 where it is said Their Angels do continually behold the face of my Father In like maner out of the 12. of the Acts 15. where the faithfull which were assembled in the house of Marke said of Peter knocking at the doore It is his Angell for the beleeuers spake there according to the common opinion receiued among the people of God And that this is the opinion of the Fathers it may appeare out of Augustines 1. booke of Meditations chap. 12. This also saith he I iudge a singular blessing that from the very moment of my birth God hath giuen me an Angell of peace to keepe me euen to my very end But extraordinarily it is cleare by the Scriptures that as oft as need requireth many Angels haue bene sent to seuerall beleeuers to defend them Psal 34. So the Angels are said to pitch their tents about those that feare God The same is to be thought of euery countrey For Dan. 10.13.20.21 and 11.1 and 12.1 it is said that the Angell of God did fight against the King of the Persians and that each of their Angels did defend that kingdome which was committed to his charge Concerning euill spirits we learne thus much that sometime one man is vexed by one and the selfe same euill spirit as may be gathered out of the historie of Iob 1.12 And sometime that many haue bene molested by one and the selfe same euill spirit as in 2. Chron. 18.21 one euill spirit deceiued many Prophets Also we reade that sometime many euill spirits did molest one and the selfe same man as Luke 8.30 a legion of diuels did possesse one man But that God hath appointed to euery man one euill Angell cannot be gathered out of any place of the Scripture Whether can there arise dissentiōs and discords by our meanes amongst the good Angels as Dan. 10.13 it is sayd that the Prince of the Persians fought against the Prince of the Grecians A learned interpreter answereth that by the names of Princes are not signified the Angels which had the defence of the kingdomes of the Persians and the Grecians but those men which at that time were Princes of Persia and Greece That this should be the meaning of the words that the Angell fought against Cambyses at that time king of the Persians for the space of one thirtie daies that is to say that he did hinder his cruell Edicts and plots made to keepe the people of God still in captiuitie and more grieuously to oppresse them least they should be put in execution but that there should come after him the Prince of the Grecians to wit Alexander the great who should asswage the furie of the kings of Persis that was kindled against the people of God which also came to passe as histories do testifie But the Schoolemen answer that there is the greatest consent amongst the Angels in regard of will because they are blessed and amongst those which be blessed there is the greatest peace but yet there may be amongst them some diuersitie of iudgement to wit being ignorant of the decree of God which is not alwayes made manifest to the Angels some thinke they should do thus and some thinke they should do otherwise But it is not the diuersitie of opinions but the contrarietie of wils that ouerturneth friendship Haue those Angels which neuer sinned neede of Christ the Mediator The Angels had need of a Mediator indeede not of redemption from sinne for in that sense Christ is the Mediator betweene God and men a 1. Tim. 2.5 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but of conseruation in goodnes and grace and of * combining them againe vnder one head to wit that they might be againe vnited with the elect vnder one and the same head Christ that so they might cleaue vnto God inseperably and without all danger of falling in time to come And so by this meanes that their righteousnes and integritie which is imperfect in the sight of God b Iob. 4 18. might be couered before God with that most perfect and infinite righteousnesse of Christ for which cause it is said Ephes 1.10 that God did purpose with himselfe to gather together againe as it were vnder one head all things which be in heauen and earth that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to bring them againe vnder one common head to gather them againe together and as it were to recall them backe againe to their head and to their beginning Are we to pray vnto the Angels or to worship them with any religious worship The Angell answereth Manoah Iudg. 13.16 If thou wilt offer a burnt offering thou shalt offer it to Iehouah and Christ saith Mat. 4.10 Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God and him onely shalt thou serue And Paul condemnes all seruing and worshipping of images Col. 2.18 The Angell Reuel 19.20 forbids himselfe to be worshipped as also chap. 22.9 because the office of a Mediator agreeth to Christ alone And the Angels themselues are but creatures and do acknowledge themselues to be fellow-seruants of God with vs. Neither as Augustine saith do the holy men themselues nor the Angels desire that to be giuen to them which they know to be due to God
alone On the contrary those Angels which be enemies to the truth and diuels do do their endeuour to chalenge vnto themselues the name of God and the worship of God Yet we do not denie but that we are to honor the good Angels by thinking well of them with loue reuerence obedience and imitation Ob. 1. Iacob called vpon an Angell Gen. 48 when he said The Angell that deliuered me out of all trouble blesse these children Answ Iacob did not meane any created but that vncreated Angell the Sonne of God who of his office is called that Angell This is plaine from the text for the same action is attributed to this Angell and to Iehouah to wit that he would blesse Ephraim and Manasses Ob. 2. Iob 19.21 Haue pittie vpon me haue pittie vpon me O my friends for the hand of God toucheth me By friends in this place Bellarmine saith that Augustine vnderstandeth Angels Bellarm. cap. 1. de Sanctorum beatitud ergo Answ It is plaine he meant his friends who came to visite him but yet vexed him with bitter and contumelious words Ob. 3. Iohn wished Grace to the Churches from the seuen Spirits Answ By seuen spirits we must vnderstand onely the holy Ghost who though one in person yet by communication of gifts so worketh as if he were many spirits Why would God vse the ministerie of Angels Not for any necessitie for he stands in need of nothing but of his good will to the end he might declare his goodnesse towards vs in that he hath giuen the Angels to be our seruants for his owne glorie and for our comfort because we see such excellent creatures to be created euen for our sakes and appointed for our seruice Againe both to beget and to preserue friendship betweene vs and the Angels vntill such time as we shall enioy their most ioyful companie in the heauens What is the reason that whereas the Angels were wont in old time to appeare often to the Fathers in the forme of men and to conuerse and talke with them familiarly now they do it no more Because now Christ being come in the flesh and sitting now at the right hand of the Father in heauen and hauing giuen his holy Spirit plentifully it is his wil that our conuersation should be in heauen and not with the Angels vpon the earth visibly Further because the Church of God had neede at the beginning of such confirmations from heauen but now the word of God is sufficiently confirmed Heb. 1.1 What vse hath the Church of the doctrine concerning Angels 1. That we might acknowledge the endlesse loue of God and his fatherly care ouer vs who hath created such keepers for vs and giuen them charge ouer vs whereby we should learne to worship and to loue him Againe to the intent that we should walke comely and holily before the Angels who are witnesses and obseruers of our speeches and actions Lastly that we might be vpholden by faith in all aduersities and dangers knowing that that saying of Eliseus is most true 2. Kin. 6.16 that those which be with vs are moe then those which be against vs. What things be contrary to this doctrine 1. The errour of the Sadduces who affirmed that the Angels were nothing else but good motions or good thoughts which God putteth into our hearts and that they were not spiritual substances subsisting of themselues 2. Their error of whom we reade Col. 2.18 who deuised the worshipping of Angels 3. Of the Papists who affirmed without the warrant of the word of God that every man hath appointed vnto him two Angels one good another euill the one to vexe him the other to keepe him to whom he is giuen and that each of them is an inseparable companion of euery man The which errors are confuted by those things which haue bene spoken before The seuenth common Place of euill Angels or of Diuels Are there also euill Angels THere be which is not onely proued by testimonies of Scripture a Genes 3.1 Ioh. 8.44 1. Pet. 5.8 Iude 6. Reu. 12.9 but also by very experience and by the horrible and heauie effects of wicked Angels By what names are they called 1. Of their nature or spirituall essence they are called Spirits b 1. Kin. 22.21 Mat. 8.16 Luke 10.20 2. Of their office vnto which they were all created at the beginning they are simply called Angels c 1. Cor. 6.3 2. Pet. 2.4 Iude 6. of their knowledge giuen to them in the creation they are called * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 diuels because they haue great knowledge as may appeare in the historie of Adams fall and are very subtill d Deut. 22.17 Leuit. 17.7 1. Cor. 10.20 whence is the doctrine of diuels e 1. Tim. 4.1.6 3. From accident qualities that is such as they haue gotten to themselues by their owne free will they are called wicked f Luke 8.2 impure and vncleane spirits g Mat. 10.1 Zach. 13.2 and a lying spirit or the spirit of lies h 1. Kin. 22.22 Ioh. 8.44 of fornication i Hos 4.12 of maliciousnesse or giddinesse k Esa 19.14 Belial l 2. Cor. 6.15 without all order without yoke and gouernement or wicked which is good for nothing and as the chiefe that euill one and malicious as who should say he doth wholly give himselfe to malice and doth exercise himselfe in it m Math. 6.13 13.19 4. Of the effects they be called diuels or in the singular number a diuell n Ioh. 8.44 which name imports a backbiter because he doth continually accuse God vnto men and men vnto God yea man to man and man to himselfe that so he might turne God from men and men from God and men from men o Gen. 3.1.4.5 Job 1.9.11 2.3 he is also called Satan p Math. 4.10 which signifieth an aduersarie q 1. King 5.4 1. Pet. 5.8 and that Tempter r Marke 1.13 Act. 5.3 a spirit of diuination ſ Acts 16.16 the enemie of God of Christ and our enemie t Luke 10.19 and apolluon or destroying u Reuel 9.11 For the Scripture doth vse often to speake of the vncleane spirits in the singular number to note out that chiefedome of impiety which is opposite and contrary to Christ and his kingdome 5. They haue names from the diuers formes wherein they appeared hereupon he is called that great Dragon as also of his poisoned craft that old Serpent x Reu. 12.8.9 6. Of his power and pride which he exerciseth especially toward the reprobate hence he is called Beelzebub that is the king of flies y 2. Kings 1.2 Math. 12.24 the strong man armed z Mat. 12.29 a roring lion the prince of the world a Iohn 12.31 the God of this world b 2. Corin. 4.4 Lastly the prince and the princes and powers of the aire the gouernors of this world because they rule the wicked
that promise The seed of the woman shall breake the Serpents head Gen. 3.15 belongeth to Christ and to all his members But they haue greater power against the reprobate therefore the Apostle saith Ephes 2.2 that the diuel doth finish his worke in the children of disobedience In what sense is Satan said 2. Cor. 11.14 to transforme himselfe into an Angell of light Not in regard of his substance but in regard of his counterfeting whereby with strange delusions appearances and superstitions he doth faine himselfe to be an Angell of light sent of God from heauen that so his counsels might be listened vnto Can they worke true miracles that is such as do agree with the very things themselues or onely counterfet Christ saith Mat. 24.24 There shall arise false christs and shal shew great signes and wonders And therefore sometimes they shew true signes that is such in truth as they seeme to be c Exod. 7.12 8.7 not by their owne power but vsing certaine hidden causes of nature and yet but lies because they are vsed to deceiue and to confirme a lie d Deut. 13.12 2. Thess 2.9 and indeed not worthy the name of miracles yet the most of them be meere illusions and deceits and legerdemaines like to those of Simon Magus Act. 8.9.10.11 For it is God alone that doth great wonders e Psal 72.18 136.4 to wit such as be done in truth and be wonders indeed whose cause is knowne to no mortall man and such as are done without deceit beyond the course of nature and without meanes and such as can by no meanes be effected by the course of nature and which are appointed especially to set foorth the glorie of God and to further mans saluation Wherefore doth God permit them 1. 2. Thes 2.10 That they who will not embrace the loue of the truth might beleeue lies 2. That the faith and patience of the elect might be proued Deut. 13.3 What be the effects and indeuors of wicked Angels What man is able to recken them all He is the enemie of God of Christ and of men and therefore doth take vnto himselfe the glorie of God whether it be by himselfe a Math. 4.9 or whether it be by his instruments to wit Antichrist and such men as challenge to themselues the honor of God b 2. Thes 2 4. He is the author of sinne for it sprang from him and he doth daily stirre vs vp to sinne that he might plunge vs with himselfe into the gulfe of eternall death c Ioh. 8.44 Heb. 2.14 he worketh effectually in the wicked d Eph. 2.2 2. Thes 2.9 he doth corrupt the word of God e Mat. 4.6 he soweth tares in the Lords field f Mat. 13.25 he raiseth vp heresies he prouoketh men to sundrie kinds of idolatrie he raiseth persecutions against the godly In commonweales he troubleth all with tumults and warres In the familie and priuatly he laboureth to trouble annoy and destroy particular men by sundrie meanes he vrgeth men to commit mischiefs and hainous sinnes He studieth as much as he can to hurt mens bodies he doth infect the elements and troubleth them for mans ruine and especially in this age wherin he knoweth the generall iudgement to approch he doth shew his rage more cruelly then euer before by lies and murthers and confoundeth heauen and earth together Do they take vnto them true bodies sometimes Sometimes they take vnto them counterfeit bodies as it is gathered out of the storie of the Witch who raised vp a spirit in stead of true Samuel g 1. Sam. 28.12 And sometimes true bodies as may be gathered out of the former Treatise touching good Angels For if good Angels haue taken vnto them true bodies there is no doubt but euill Angels are able also by Gods permission to take vnto them true bodies and appeare in them and speake to men and performe actions like vnto mens actions Whether are euill spirits besides that inward torment of mind wherewith they are tormented for euer punished also with that bodily fire of hell Christ saith plainely Mat. 25.41 that he will say to the wicked Depart ye cursed into euerlasting fire which is prepared for the diuell and his Angels Out of which place it is concluded that euill Angels besides that torment of mind wherewith they are vexed are also tormented with that infernall fire as though they were bound vnto it no otherwise then the soule being bound to the bodie suffers of the bodie but we must iudge that to be done after a wonderfull but yet after a true manner as Augustine saith For what purpose did almightie God ordaine them 1. To the end that by meanes of their temptations the godly might be exercised in humilitie and patience and so their saluation might be furthered a 2. Cor. 12.7 2. That by them as it were certaine tormenters he might punish the wicked as well with spirituall as bodily punishments In one word that God might vse their boldnesse to the enlarging of his owne glorie Whether do some men truly collect out of the Col. 1.20 where it is said that God doth reconcile all things to himself thorough Christ both which are in earth as also which are in heauen that therefore the diuels and the damned shall one day be saued Rather most falsly For by this word all we must vnderstand the whole bodie of the Church which is as it were diuided into two parts namely those which are in heaven by whom are simply vnderstood the faithfull that died before the comming of Christ and into those which are in earth by whom are vnderstood those whom Christ found liuing at his first coming or those which followed and liued since his coming as also Eph. 1.10 What is the vse of the doctrine concerning diuels 1. That we might be confirmed in the faith touching good Angels the kingdome of heauen and the blessed spirits because seeing the effects of contraries is contrarie if there be diuels and euill Angels then certainely there be good Angels and if there be an hell then certainely there is a kingdome of heauen 2. That we should be so much the more affraid to offend God because as Peter saith 2.2.4 If God spared not the Angels when they sinned but cast them bound in chaines into hell assuredly he knoweth how to reserue the vnrighteous against the day of iudgement to be punished 3. That we might be so much the more watchfull and stand vpon our guard and therefore should fight euen as it were for life and death with our spirituall weapons but especially with continuall prayers vnto Christ against so many enemies and spirituall wickednesses and that we should put on the whole armor of God that is that complete spirituall armour which the Apostle prescribeth Eph. 6.11.13 and 1. Pet. 5.9 What comfort haue we in that battell That we haue Christ not onely a conqueror and triumpher ouer the powers of hell
Adam sinned in him did iustly spoile all of his gifts Caluin Instit lib. 2. cap. 1. Sect. 7. This contagion hath his cause neither in the substance of flesh nor of the soule but because it was so ordained of God that those gifts which he had bestowed vpon the first man he should both haue them and also loose them as well for himselfe as for others that come after him Further the soules are infected in the bodies being corrupted with sinne not by physicall and naturall touching as wine put into a sower vessell but by the most iust appointment of God For so soone as the soule being pure in it selfe is vnited to the bodie which is conceiued in sinne that disobedience of our first father is imputed vnto man as if it were his owne Whereupon the Apostle saith that all of vs sinned in Adam as in the stocke the meaning is that all of vs were guiltie of sinne to wit being in his loines Rom. 5.12 After which maner also Leuie is said to pay tithes to Abraham before he was borne Heb. 7.9.10 Now this disobedience of Adam imputed by the iust appointment of God there followes presently in the soule also contagion or corruption and an inclination to euill as a punishment of that first sinne which punishment it selfe is also sin euen as the obedience of Christ imputed to vs is properly our righteousnesse whereby we are iustified and regeneration is the consequent of this righteousnesse But as it is better to quench a fire then aske how it begun so is it better to quench originall sin then aske how it came How do you proue the immortalitie of the soule 1. By sundrie testimonies of Scripture a Psal 49.21 Eccles 12.7 Mat. 10.28 22.32 Phil. 1.23 1. Pet 3.19 Reu. 6.9 7.9 Againe by arguments taken first from the forme of creation for the soule of man was created by diuine inspiration and therefore both diuine and immortall 2. From that very knowledge which God hath put into the soule because such a vigor as doth soone vanish away is neuer able to aspire to immortalitie and the fountain of life for all things corporall feare to transcend and so consequently to search by admirable sharpnes things celestiall diuine and eternall 3. By the testimonie of conscience which by the guiltinesse of sinnes doth conceiue horrible terrors now if the soule were not immortall what need such terrors of future feare 4. By the effects or the excellent gifts of the soule wherwith it doth excell as that it vieweth the heauens and sheweth her force in deuising sundry and very admirable things 5. From the nature thereof not only that it is simple in it owne essence and void of contrarietie and all bodily accidents but because it is the image of God Gen. 1.26.27 but no mortall thing can be the image of the immortall God Yea the meate of mans soule is immortall b Ioh. 6.51 1. Pet. 1.23 And vnlesse the soule be immortall our faith and al our religion is in vaine 1. Cor. 15.14 the godly are miserable the vngodly happy and blessed the beasts be more happie then men God is not affected with any regard of the iust or vniust To al these adde in the last place the common consent of all nations How do soules differ from Angels Not in regard of the essence but because Angels haue not any bodily coniunction but the soules of men are capable of that coniunction or else because they are not the forme of any body but these are For what end was man made For the knowledge of God againe for his worship as well spirituall and internall as corporall and externall in the earth Last of all for his glorie Whereupon should follow the felicitie and blessednesse of the whole man in heauen hence Christ saith This is life eternall that they know thee the onely true God and whom thou hast sent Iesus Christ Ioh. 17.3 What vse make you of this common place concerning man That we may first acknowledge with thankes Gods power and bountie manifested in our creation and birth 2. To comfort vs in all troubles Psal 22.18 What speciall vse make you of the soules immortalitie I am taught first to giue all possible thankes to God my Creator for such a benefite 2. That I do not like the brute beasts set mine hart vpon these transitorie things but that I often meditate of those things which concerne the eternall felicitie of my soule What is contrarie to the doctrine of the creation of man 1. The Rabbins error who thought that in the creation of man the Angels were coworkers with God 2. Aristotles error who thought that as the world had no beginning so also man had none to which adde the fables of Poets and prophane Writers 3. The false opinions of the Epicures and Sadduces who make a mocke of the immortalitie of the soule Isa 22.14 1. Corinth 15.32 4. Of the Manichees Priscillianists Platonists who affirmed the soule to be of the substance of God 5. Of the Pythagoreans who thought they went from one bodie to another bodie and the Aegyptians who thought the number of soules was a set number and that when one was dead his former soule went into another bodie 6. Of Themistius and also of Auerroes who dreamed that there was but one soule of all men 7. The madnesse of many who so inwrap their selues in the things of this life that they neglect the eternall felicitie and saluation of the soule Mat. 16.26 The ninth common Place Of the image of God in man What is an Image IT is the pourtraiture or representation of some thing and that both in the soule of man to wit in the mind or facultie of knowledge and it is called of the Philosophers an Idea namely a forme of something conceaued in the mind also out of the mind and it is a similitude and fashion either reall of the substance and qualities together as when Adam is said to beget men after his owne image Gen. 5.3 or else of certaine adiuncts alone as Luk. 20.24 A penie hath Cesars image or else it is some vaine shadow and figure What difference is there betweene an image and a similitude A similitude hath a larger signification then an image for where there is an image there is also a similitude but not of the contrarie For one egge is said to be like another egge and yet one egge is not the image of another egge But in this disputation of the image of God in man this word of similitude or likenes is added to the word image in way of exposition as Philip. 2.7 Was man made after the image of God He was for Gen. 1.17 God created man after his owne image and Paule saith 1. Cor. 11.7 The man ought not to couer his head because he is the image of God and Col. 3.10 ●s man onely the image of God or made after his image 1. Christ is the naturall true and
prouidence Hath God so left thus his workmanship whereby he hath made all things as a builder leaueth his house when he hath builded it NO but being continually present with it he ordereth gouerneth and ruleth the things which he hath made Iohn 5.17 My father worketh hitherto and I worke And in the booke of Wisedome 1.7 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the spirit which comprehendeth all things neyther could the world stand the space of the twinckeling of an eye if God should withdraw his gouernment from it By what name is the gouernment of the world called It is commonly called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Prouidence of the verbe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to prouide or take care of so that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is a prouidence a taking care of a carefull tegard not a bare and idle foreknowing or knowledge of things but a working and effectuall disposing of all things Wisedome 6.7 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God taketh care alike for all This also is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Decree and purpose of God a Act. 4.28 and altogether differeth in nature from Prudence which is proper to men for it both deceiueth and is deceiued How many parts be there of Gods prouidence Two One is an eternall and vnchangeable disposing of things whereby he hath decreed from all eternitie to gouerne all things since their creation and to direct and bring them to their appointed ends The other is an actuall and temporall gouernement of the whole world whereby God doth gouerne rule and order all things by himselfe created wisely freely powerfully and well and draweth them vnto their proper ends Why is God said to gouerne all things vvisely freely powerfully and vvell He gouerneth wisely because all things are knowne and open to his eyes and he directeth them b Heb. 4.13 vnto their proper ends and in the end to his owne glorie by his certaine counsell and c Gen. 18.21 psal 33.13 15. 34.16 17. 94.8 9.10 159 7.8 lin 12.6.7 determination although this be sometimes vnknowne to vs. Freely because God is a most free worker who is compelled by no man to this gouerning of all things d Psal 115.3 Powerfully because he suffereth no trouble or paines in executing his will but effecteth whatsoeuer he willeth and as he willeth it without trouble or wearinesse neyther can his working be hindred by any strength or restrained by any law e Psal 115.3 Iona. 1.14 Iohn 4.8 Iob. 9.5.6.6 7 Wisd 8.1 She extendeth her selfe through all things from one end to another mightily and comely dooth she order all things Well f Gen. 50 20 Because he worketh well alwaies yea euen then when the instruments offend and sinne in the worke How many sorts are there of Gods prouidence Three sorts in respect of the creatures Vniuersall Speciall and Particular or singular Suidas citeth out of the auncient Diuines 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the prouidence of God is in three maners 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in administration maintaining and vpholding of things 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in his approuing and allowing in good actions 3 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in his permission in euill actions What is the Vniuersall prouidence It is that whereby God directeth all creatures according to that secret instinct which he hath put into them at their creation and so preserueth the order of nature which himselfe hath appointed Whence proue you this Vniuersall prouidence of God From diuers testimonies of Scripture The whole Psalm 104. containeth a notable declaration and praise of it Likewise Christ speaketh of it Iohn 5.17 My father worketh hitherto and I worke And Act. 17.28 In him wee liue and mooue and haue our being And Heb. 1.3 All things are sustained by the word of God .i. by the appointment or power of Christs word What is Gods speciall prouidence It is that whereby God gouerneth and ruleth all parts of the world yea euen those which seeme most base and all their actions and euents whether in heauen or in earth as likewise amongst men In heauen so as not the least cloud is bred mooueth changeth or vanisheth but by the appointment of God In earth not so much as a little hearbe or weede groweth florisheth or fadeth without his hand no not the least creature is bred or preserued but by God And amongst men none are conceiued borne neither doe liue are preserued or moue neither doe any thing or die but by the commaundement and will of God Shew me some testimonies of this particular Prouidence concerning all creatures Psal 147.8 Which couereth the heauen with clouds and giueth raine to the earth in season and maketh the grasse growe vpon the mountaines VVhich giueth snowe as wooll and scattereth the hore frost like ashes v. 16. VVhich giueth to beasts their foode and to the young rauens which call vpon him v. 9. Christ speaketh thus Mat. 5.45 Your heauenly father maketh his Sunne to arise and he raineth vpon the iust and vniust And Chap. 6.30 God clotheth the lilies and grasse of the field Chap. 10.29.30 Are not two sparrowes solde for a farthing and one of them falleth not to the ground without your father Yea euen the haires of your head are nombred So God sent a winde vpon the Sea and prepared a fish to swallowe Ionah Iona. 1.4.17 He prepared a plant called Ricinus which is a shrub comming nigh the hignesse of a tree hauing leaues like the Plane tree It is commonly called Palma Christi which went ouer his head and he also prepared a worme to destroy this plant and make it wither Chap. 4 6.7 1. Sam. 2.21 God visited Anna and she conceiued and bare three sonnes and two daughters Deut. 30.20 He is thy life and the length of thy daies Isai 38.5 The Lord added to King Ezechias his life fifteen yeares Ierom. 10.23 The way of man is not his owne that he can walke and himselfe direct his steps Prov. 21.1 The heart of the King is in the hand of the Lord and he turneth it which way he will 1. Cor. 12.6 Who worketh all in all And all these things are spoken of the particular prouidence of God Paule hath this speech 1. Cor. 9.9 Doth God take care of Oxen Doth he in these words exclude them from the prouidence of God No for he feedeth them as all other creatures Psal 147.9 He giueth meat to all flesh and to beasts their food Also Psal 36.6 Thou Lord preseruest both man and beast But in that place Paule teacheth that the Law was not chiefely writ for Oxen which is Deu. 25.4 Thou shalt not muzzle the mouth of the Ox which treadeth out the corne But that it was made for men that they may learne to performe such offices as Iustice requireth and by an argument à comparatis may know that stipends are due to Ministers who faithfully labour in their places Seeing all things are ruled by the prouidence and
ignominiously punished that hence it may appeare he was despised of men and full of sorrowes according to Esais Prophecie cha 53.3 3. He is crucified Gal. 3.13 then which punishment there was at that time none more grieuous ignominious for as it is to be gatherd out of Ps 22.17 the words of Thomas Iohn 20.25 they being strongly stretched vpon the crosse were fastned vnto it with nailes driuē through their hāds feet afterwards being set vpright on high they ended their life in the horrible torments of all their nerues whole body also the death of the crosse was most abhominable pronounced accursed by gods own mouth b Deut 21 23. This curse would the son of god vndergo therby to free vs frō the curse we had deserued that it might appeaer that sin was most abhominable for which god would haue his son vndergo such punishment that euen as death by a tree entred into the world euē so by a tree of the crosse it might be takē out of the world To conclud that the truth might bee answerable to the figure for euen as the sacrifice was lifted vpon the Altar and offered c Lev. 1.9.13 Deut 2-27 so Christ was lifted vp from the earth into the ayre being hanged and killed vpon the Crosse because he must ouercome the powers of the aire Ephes 2.2 Also Iohn 3. 14. And as Moses lift vp the Serpent in the wildernesse so must the son of man be lift vp that whosoeuer beleeueth in him should not perish but liue for euer He suffereth betwixt two the eues as a captaine of theeues that the Scripture might bee fulfilled Esa 53.13 He was committed among the transgressors and praied for sinners that he might suffer the punishment which we had deserued and might the second time make vs equall with the Angels in the kingdome of his father by the merit of which punishment hee also sanctified the infamous places appointed for punishment of malefactors as also the punishmēts themselues of malefactors least any man should think that the infamie of them should be any hindrance before God to them which beleeue in him or that they could bee any impediment to mans saluation He was crucified with his hands spread abroad that with the one he might call and inuite the Iewes with the other the Gentiles vnto him offering them his merit and likewise as one that should become iudged of all men should set some on his right hand some on the left 6. He hangeth aliue vpon the crosse three whole houres namely from the sixt houre to the ninth that is frō twelue of the clock after our count til three in the afternoone Which great ignominy of Christ is the reward of our arrogancie and also our greatest glory prize before God by which all our iniquitie is put away Therfore Paul Gal. 6.4 saith God forbid that I should glory in anie thing but in the crosse of our Lord Iesus Christ 7. He hangeth naked that he might make satisfaction for the sin of our first parents who were disrobed spoyled of the garment of innocency also that he might cloath vs with his innocency glory immortality that he might enrich vs by his pouerty to conclude that such as the first man was dwelling in Paradise such might be the second man at his entrance into Paradise Also lots were cast vpon his garments which thing was also foretold Psal 22.19 that we might beleeue the euents of things shewing vs that this was he which should come 8. He feeleth thirst corporally cōming through the anguish and bitternesse of his griefe through the sense of Gods wrath as also spiritually through a most ardent desire of our saluation 9 In steed of Hippocras or some pretious wine that was wont to be giuen to them who were condemned to die that thereby they might be comforted Prouerb 31 6.7 he is made to drinke a most bitter drinke of vineger and gall mixed together that in him might be fulfilled that which long before was foretold by Dauid Psal 69.22 And that the second Adam might suffer punishment for that sweete iuyce which the first Adam sucked out of the forbidden apple 10 Men of all conditions reuile him the common people the Priests and Scribes the theefe vpon the crosse the souldiers scoffe at his prayers and wrest them to a verie wicked sense as though forsaking God he asked helpe of the creatures 11. He dieth else would the crucifying haue done no good vnlesse the soule had beene pulled away from the bodie because God had said In dying thou shalt die the death Gen. 2.17 12. His side is thrust through with a speare out of which ranne bloud by which the Church springeth and is quickned euen as Eua was formed out of Adams side and water wherewith the Church being new born is washed And from this wound as from a fountaine of life springeth the saluation of the Church comfort and expiation of all sins satisfaction and that washing or purifying which behooued to be done with the bloud is vnderstood to be now accomplished for without the shedding of bloud there is no remission of sinnes Heb. 9.22 Also by this wound the death of Christ was made manifest and certaine for the water which issued out of that wound of his side shewed that the weapon entered euen into the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 namely that skinne which being full of water encloseth the hart which being wounded it is necessarie that euerie creature so wounded should forthwith die At what time was he crucified At the feast of the Passeouer that he might shew himselfe truly to be that Pascall Lambe which was slayne for the sinnes of the world As the soule of Christ was separated from his bodie for the space of three daies was the Godhead likewise separated from them both or was the Godhead ioyned with the soule and seuered f●om the bodie Neyther saith Damascenus For the Godhead remayned vnseparable from both de Orthod fide and that which the word once tooke vpon him neuer afterwards left But how could it be that the diuine nature should continue vnited to the soule which was in Paradise and the bodie which was in the earth The diuine nature of the Sonne because it is both infinite and present in all places remained whole and vndeuided vnited to both together that is as well to the soule of Christ which was in Paradise as to the bodie which lay liueles in the earth For seeing the nature of God is most simple and so not to be parted or diuided God is not to be said to haue one part in heauen and an other in earth but he is whole in heauen and whole in earth not at seuerall times and by succession but both together which thing no created nature can doe Hence commeth the saying of Augustine It is proper to the whole Trinitie to be whole euerie where in spaces of places not diuided
nothings else is meant by these words then that Christ did descend into the state of the dead and that hee was added to the number and companie of other the deade for whom he dyed according to Dauids saying Psalm 28.5.6 I am reckoned amongst them which goe downe into the graue And Psal 88. I am as a man without strength I am counted among thē that go downe into the pit Free among the deade like the slaine lying in the graue whom thou remembrest no more and they are cut off by thine hand Whereupon hee is said to bee raised againe not from the graue but from the dead which sense and opinion doth not much differ from the first of the former What is the fift The first is of them who allegorically or metaphorically by the descention of Christ vnderstand his great ignominie and extream humiliation whilest he laie in the graue vntill the third day after his death as if he had beene foyled and vanquished by death and the diuell at which time the diuel and the Pharises did as it were insult ouer him as though he were quite gone and no more remained Doe you approue of this then I doe not dislike it for it is agreeable to the type set forth in Dauid Psal 88.7 Thou hast laied me in the lowest graue in darknesse and in the deepe and it is agreeable to that place which is Ephes 4.10 in which as by ascending aboue all heauens the Apostle vnderstandeth his greatest exaltation so by his descending to the lowest parts of the earth or to hell hee vnderstandeth the greatest humiliation or debasing of Christ So Esa 14.15 Descending to hell is taken for extreame humiliation Thou saidest in thine heart I will ascend into heauen c. but thou shalt be brought downe to the graue to the sides of the pit And so may the place of Mathew 11.23 be expounded Thou O Capernaum which art lifted vp vnto heauen shalt be brought downe to hell What is the sixt It is theirs who say that by Christs descending to hel is signified those great torments of minde which Christ in his agony and vpon the crosse sustained of which we haue spoken in the Passion of Christ Is this exposition agreeable to trueth It is for it is agreeable to Scripture and proportionable to faith For Esa 53.5 saith that Christ was broken for our iniquities And Psal 18.6 The sorrowes of the graue haue compassed mee round about And Act. 2.24 Peter saith that he was entangled in the pangs of death the griefes which the curse and wrath of God procureth And Gal. 3.13 it is said He vvas made for vs a curse and that truly and without trope not in himselfe indeede but in as much as he was our suretie so that he truely felt our burden to bee laid vpon him And Heb. 5.7 the Apostle saieth that Christ was heard from his feare when he praied with teares and strong crying And that which is verie wonderfull is recorded of him that through vehemencie of his torment drops of bloud ran downe from his face and that he could not be comforted but by the sight of Angels Luk. 22.43 And in the end we see that Christ was cast downe so low that he was constrained to cry out when his anguish vrged him My God my God way hast thou forsaken me Mat. 27.46 By all which it may be gathered that hee wrestled and grapled not with a cōmon manner of death but with the forces of hell and the horror of eternall death But this seemeth to make against the exposition namelie that the torments of the minde are put after the griefes of the bodie in the creede This is done because the griefe of bodie first offereth it selfe to the senses but not so the torments of minde But it may be obiected Although they ought to be set after death and crucifying yet they should not haue beene mentioned after buriall Although the descending of Christ to hell was ended in death and in time did goe before the buriall of the body yet it is set after it in the order of the narration of the articles of our faith because it seemed good in one continued course of speach to describe whatsoeuer pertained to the debasing of his bodie and afterward to come to the suffering in soule But could God euer be angrie vvith his onlie and most beloued sonne Christ or forsake him Neuer but yet he so hid his fauour and help for a time that the humane nature of Christ did truely feele these distresses wherewith they are vrged who are cast away and forsaken of God And as Barnard saith Serm. 5. de verbis Esaiae It is a kinde of forsaking vvhen as in so great necessitie there vvas no shevving of povver no shevving of Maiestie Why vvas it needfull he should suffer these torments 1. Because when as all our sinnes were cast vpon him therefore it was fit that he should so feele the wrath of God against them as if he himselfe had committed the sinnes of all men 2. That for our sakes he might try and ouercome all manner of griefes and temptations and so the torments of death and of hell for our cause 3. That hee might aduance and carie vs vp to the ioyes of heauen being deliuered from the power of Hell VVhat profit redounded to vs by Christs descending into Hell 1. Victorie ouer the power of the diuell the horrour of death and the paines of Hell is obtained a Ose 13.14 2. Our enemies are tryumphed ouer Coloss 2.15 And he hath spoiled principalities and powers that is Sathan with his Angels b Ephes 6 12 hath made a shew of them openly and hath tryumphed ouer them in the same crosse 3. Hauing ouercome the sting of death he hath opened to all beleeuers the kingdom of heauen Therefore Hilarie saith lib. 2. de Trinitate The crosse death and hell are our life VVhat is the vse of Christs descending into hell 1. That wee should not now be afraid in death of those things which our prince hath swallowed vp 2. That looke how much more we see him humbled and abased for our cause so much the lesse wee should doubt either of the fathers loue towards vs or our redemption wrought by him and the exaltation wee shall hereafter receiue in Heauen What is opposite to this Doctrine 1. That fable of Purgatorie the paines whereof seing Christ did not vndergo nor suffer for ought we can read who notwithstanding suffered for vs all kinde of griefes a Isa 53.3 4 therefore it followeth that these are forged and counterfaite and to be feared of none who belieue For if it were as they say it should then follow that there are some griefes which Christ did not suffer for our sake 2. Of those Limbi which they haue in their owne inuentions appointed for the fathers vnder the Lawe and infants vnder the Gospell who haue beene depriued of the signe of Baptisme The sixe and twentieth common
post tristia Tartara Christo vndique fronde nemus gramina flore fauent See how the world her face and eke her grace reneweth And now her Lordes returne with all like grace she sheweth Her late reuiued Lord from hell she entertaines and deckes with leaues the woodes with her floures the plaines One what day of the yeare One that day as the skilfull in Chronologie do write on which Moses with his people of Israel passed through the red Sea and came safe to the shore as it were from the graue to life Pharaoh and his companie being drowned in the waues Exod. 14.22.28 Euen so the Lorde with his people the Church hauing vanquisht his enemies passed from death to life by his glorious resurrectiō How manie daies after his death One the third day after it according to the figure For as Ionah was three dayes and three nightes in the whales bellie so the sonne of man did lie three daies in the sepulchre a Mat. 12.40 according to the prophesie of Osea 6.2 He will quicken vs after tvvoe daies namely the Messias and one the third day he vvill raise vs vp namely in his owne person and vve shall liue in his sight For the resurrection of Christ which came to passe one the third day is a pledge of ours But here we must remember Augustines supputation of the daies of which we made mention in the place of his buriall VVhy did he deferre his resurrection vntill the third day That it might plainly appeare hee was dead but hee stayed no longer then the three daies least the faith of his disciples should be hazarded and shaken neither did hee deferre it till the last day because of our hope 1. Pet. 1.3 Blessed be the father of our Lord who hath regenerated vs vnto a liuelie hope by the resurrection of Christ from the dead Moreouer that he might bee the first of them which rise againe 1. Cor. 15.20 On what day of the weeke did he rise When the Sabaoth was now passed and the first day of the weeke next following was begunne that is vpon Sunday Mark 16.1.2.9 That on the same day wherein God made heauen and earth both heauen and earth might all ioy for the Lords resurrection whereupon this day is called the Lords day Apoc. 1.10 In vvhat houre of the day At Sunne rising Mat. 28.1 that hee might thereby signifie himselfe to bee the true Sunne which enlightneth those which sit in darknesse and in the shadowe of death to guide their feete into the way of peace Luk. 1.79 VVhat adiuncts followed the resurrection Signes testimonies and his owne appearing after his resurrection VVhat signes testified that Christ was truely risen Foure chriefly 1. An earthquake as though the earth euen did long to restore him to heauen and for a testimonie of the Resurrection accomplished as also of the efficacie and so of the omnipotencie of Christ who by his power and at his pleasure doth shake heauen earth and sea 2. An huge stone was remoued from the sepulcre by the Ministerie of an angell Mat. 28.2 3. The Sepulcre left empty 4. The garments of the sepulcre left in it namely the linnens the napkin wrapped together apart Iohn 20.5.6.7 With signs did conuict the keepers of the Sepulcre of a lye who though they knew by the earthquake and other signes that Christ had truly risen againe which thing also they told to the chiefe Priests Mat 28. Yet being corrupted with money they forged this lye that the bodie of the Lord was stollen away by the Disciples Mat. 28.13 For neither would the Disciples haue taken away their Master naked leauing the cloathes behind them when it was more readie and handsome for them to carie away the bodie as it was wound neither would they being afraid of the Souldiers who were present and warded haue laid togither the garments so handsomely and seuerally when as their attempt would haue admitted no delay in regard of the present danger VVhat did this laying of the clothes in the Sepulcre signifie That the Lord did not neede any funerall ornaments but that he had put on immortalitie that the former innocencie which we lost in Adam was recouered for vs in Christ that the cause of shame being taken away in the last daie we shall be adorned with eternall life in stead of garments with heauenly glorie VVhat witnesses were there of this rising againe 1. The enemies of Christ namely the Romane Souldiers to whom Pilate committed the custodie of the Sepulcre who gaue testimonie to the Priests of the Lords resurrection although being by them corrupted by money which is an vsuall thing with that kinde of men they made an impudent lie that the Disciples of Iesus had taken away his bodie whilest they slept But it is an apparant lye for if the keepers slept how knew they that the bodie of the Lord was stollen away by his Disciples If they were awake why doe they lye in saying they slept if they tooke his bodie why left they his cloathes 2. The Angels of God appearing in white garments one while sitting within the Sepulcre a Ioh 20· 12 and sometimes standing without it not as though Christ could not without their helpe come out of the Sepulcre but that they might testifie themselues to be Christs ministers that they doe serue him and the Church b Heb 1 4· and the women and the Apostles might bee assured that Christ was risen againe that there might not want heauenly witnesses also hereof for they beare witnesse that Christ is truely risen againe Luk. 24.4.5.6 Mark 16.6 VVhy seeke yee the liuing among the dead Againe they say Hee is risen hee is not heere he is risen 3. The Disciples of Christ sawe the Sepulcre emptie and Christ raised vp after death who could not bee suspected of false dealing For they could not bee perswaded of Christs resurrection vnlesse they with their owne eyes and eares were ioyned together with him they were so farre from deuising it by a plot amongst themselues They also bare record hereof by their Doctrine life and bloud 4. Iesus himselfe being dead and buried did afterwards shewe himselfe in sundry maners when he was reuiued VVhat were the appearances of Christ after hee was raised againe Manifold whereby Christ presented himselfe aliue both in the day of his resurrection as also in other daies following and that fortie daies in which hee was conuersant vpon earth the beames of his brightnesse and glorie beeing repressed as yet How oft did he appeare on the day of his Resurrection Fiue times 1. To Marie Magdalene alone at the Sepulcre out of whome he had cast seauen diuels a Mark 16 9 Iohn 20 14 2. To the same Marie Magdalene and the other Marie when they were gone back from the Sepulcre in the way b Mat 28.9 that all suspition of fraude and violence might bee taken away and that hee might shewe himselfe the Redeemer of the
gazing into heauen this Iesus vvhich is taken vp from yov into heauen shall so come as ye haue seene him goe into heauen And Paule beareth record of it Ephe. 4.8 VVherfore the scripture saith Psa 69.19 When he ascēded vp on high he led coptiuitie captiue and gaue gifts vnto men Novv in that he ascended vvhat is it but that he had also descended first into the lowest parts of the earth He that descended is euen the same that ascended farre aboue all heauen's that he might fill all things See 1. Tim. 3.16 Heb. 4.14 9.24 What must be vnderstood by ascension Not a changing of one condition or estate into another or a vanishing out of sight but properly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is a motion from one place to another and that from the lower to the higher For they are said to ascend who remoue from a lower place to a higher 2. King 2.12 And Elias ascended by a whirlewind into heauen And Psal 139.8 If I ascend into heauen thou art there But figuratiuely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or attributing that to God which belongeth to man it is spoken of God Gen. 17.22 God went from the sight of Abraham And Psal 47.16 God is gone vp with triumph euen the Lord with the sound of the trumpet But also Iohn 3.13 in the first part of the verse to ascend into heauen signifieth allegorically to be endued with the light of spirituall vnderstanding Is the word Ascension vsed properly or figuratiuely in this place Properly without question as it may manifestly be proued out of diuers formes of speeches which the Euangelists haue vsed for better declaration sake for Mar. 16.19 saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is he was taken vp and on high into heauen Luk. 24.51 saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he was remoued from them or went away from them But it is plaine how by the word of going away is signified a remouing into another place And the same Euangelist giueth to vnderstand whither he went away 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he was caried vp into heauen He was caried saith he which againe certainly noteth a motion from place to place Act. 1.9 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He was lifted vp and Nubes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a cloud tooke him vp out of their sights Not because of himselfe he became inuisible but because he went higher and further off then his Disciples sight could reach Moreouer the Apostles do follow him with their eyes and sight as farre as they can whilest he did not vanish away out of their sight but stil went vp on his way For while he was going 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth remouing from place to place they stood stedfastly with their eyes vp to heauen Which had beene a foolish part of thē if they had not seene him caried on high To conclude the Angels helping the defect of the Apostles sight do testifie that Christ was taken vp by them into heauen and that he should so come as they had seene him going into heauen Hereupon the Greeke Fathers do call it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the assumption or taking vp of Christ in the flesh and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his ascension or going vp By the examination of these things which haue beene said it followeth that the ascension of Christ is not an act vndivisible or momentanie but devisible and distinguished by parts of his motion and going forward and by times and places by which he was caried vp from a lower place to a higher namely from earth vnto heauen Seeing in that saying of Paule Ephes 4.10 he that descended is also the same that ascended the word of descending doth figuratiuely signifie the humiliation of Christ why is not also the word of ascending taken figuratiuely for the same Christs exaltation glorification Because when Christ descended from heauen he descended without changing his place at what time he was God onely and not man but by that his descension was made man but when he ascended into heauen he ascended with changing of place when he was God and man Who ascended Christ who is both God and man the same who was borne man of the virgin Marie who suffered and died who rose againe and after his resurrection stayed fortie daies with his Disciples vpon the earth He I say and no other descended He that descended is euen the same that ascended Ephes 4.9 Therefore the whole Christ did really ascend because the same Christ was true God and true man but in respect of his humanitie he in his bodie ascended properly and locally from earth into heauen euen as before he had ascended truly and by a locall motion out of the graue into the land of the liuing Therfore in respect hereof it is said by Marke being taken or receiued vp and of Luke in the Acts being lifted vp For these things do not agree to the Diuinitie or Godhead of which it is said Ierem. 23.24 I fill heauen and earth but by a communication of properties 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is said of the whole person of Christ which is onely proper to one part of his nature And as Theodoretus saith Those things which are proper to the nature are communicated to the whole person Who is the efficient cause or author of Christs ascension Christ himself who by the Almighty power of his Godhead did carie vp his humane nature bring it into heauen but because the diuine power of the Father and Sonne is all one this remouing into heauen as also the raysing of him vp againe is ascribed also to the power of the Father Act. 2.33 By the right hand that is by the power and vertue of God he hath beene exalted and hath receiued of his father the promise of the holy Ghost and cap. 5.30 The God of our fathers hath raised vp Iesus vvhom ye slevv and hanged on a tree Him I say hath God lift vp vvith his right hand to be a Prince and a Sauiour But his humane nature hauing gotten agility and nimblenes of body by the resurrection mouing it selfe by the appointment and commaund of the Godheed went vpon high and ascended truely and properly and therefore it may be called a ministring or seruing cause of the ascension From vvhence is the reason and certaintie of the ascension to be taken From the adiuncts or circumstances namely of time the place from vvhence the manner of his ascension the place vnto vvhich and the vvitnesses VVhat time did he ascend On the fortieth day after his resurrection after that he had spoken to his Disciples concerning the kingdome of God that is after he had enstructed them more fully of the things pertaining to saluation and had confirmed and assured them concerning his resurrection and the truth of his bodie so as they could no longer doubt of it From vvhat place did he ascend Luke in the Gospell cap. 24.50 saith that the Disciples were led forth by Christ vnto
Bethania a village of Iudea that from that place Christ ascended But in the Acts cap. 1.12 he said that they returned from Mount Oliuet vvhich is neere vnto Ierusalem whence it is manifest that Christ ascended from some part of that mountaine not farre from the towne of Bethania into heauen Why did he choose to himselfe this place That like as he had giuen proofe of mans weaknesse and of his exceeding great loue towards vs in Mount Oliuet in that hee sweat bloud in his conflict with death Luke 22.39 44. so departing from the same place into heauen hee might giue certaine triall and proofe of his Godhead a Iohn 6.62 and so the same place might serue for Christs glorie which had giuen the beginning to his ignominie and passion 2 That the mountaines might put vs in minde of heauen 3 That from hence we might learne that those who goe into heauen out of Bethania which is expounded the house of affliction doe finde entrance by Christ vnto the ioyes of heauen and admittance into the kingdome of heauen through many tribulations VVhat vvas the manner of his ascension 1 Departing from his Disciples like a good guest he lifting vp his hands to heauen in solemne manner blesseth them and biddeth them farewell that is commendeth them to Gods protection thereby to testifie he was that blessed seed in vvhich all nature are blessed b Gen 22 18 that full saluation is obtained for vs and that we are freed from all curse and reconciled to the father that he hath blessed all that beleeue in him and that his blessing shall remaine sure for euer seeing to him is giuen all power in heauen and in earth Math. 28.18 2 Whilest the Disciples looked on he was taken vp on high Therefore he vanished not out of sight or in himselfe became inuisible but whilest his Disciples beheld he went visibly from the earth where he was formerly taken vp vnto heauen where he was not before 3 The ministerie of a cloud was vsed which cloud r●ceiued him at his going away caried him as in a wagon caried him at length out of their sight that therby he might testifie that he was that person of whom it is spoken Psal 104.3 He maketh the cloud or clouds his chariot as also that by this meanes he might as with a veile put betwixt him and them stay his disciples from further curiositie and searching after him Whither did he ascend Into heauen And least the word Heauen should be doubtfull and vncertaine or should be onely vnderstood of Heauenly conuersation such as may be euen in the earth or onely of the heauenly glorie he attained Luke saith He was taken vp on high and Marke that he was receiued vp into heauen Act. 3.21 it is there said That the heauen must containe him In which manner also Nazianzen doth expoūd it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and to be conteined of heauen vntill the time of restoring And Oecumenius Scholiastes he calleth the heauens 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is the receptacle or harbour of him that was sent namely Christ to wit the place of eternall blessednes which is without this corruptible world and so aboue or without all heauens But Paule Ephes 4.10 saith That he ascended aboue all heauens It is true For the Scripture maketh mention of three heauens i. The ayre 2. the celestiall orbs 3. the seates of the blessed into which Christ was receiued Therefore he is rightly said to asend aboue all heauens because he remained not below or within the worldly heauens but was caried aboue the aire or ayrie region and the celestiall orbs neither did he stay in those visible heauens but entered into the highest heauen which is aboue all these moueable and worldly heauens which being beautified by the light and glorie of God is subiect to no change but is inuisible to vs which as yet liue vpon the earth And this is that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that hight of which it is said Psal 68.19 Thou hast ascended vp on high By what names is that heauen called 1 The heauen of heauens and the highest habitation of heauen a 1. King 8 27· 39 Also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the highest places b Ma● 21.9 Also the third heauen c 2. Cor 12.2 in respect of the aire which is the first heauen next to vs d Math 6.26 and in respect of the celestiall spheres 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Paradise or the Garden of pleasure e Luk. 23.43 2 Cor. 12 4. Apoc 2.7 because it was figured and shadowed vnto vs by the earthly Paradise planted in Eden f Gen. 2.8 and it is now prepared for vs in stead of that earthly Paradise 3 The house of God the habitation seat and dwelling of the blessed g Iohn 14.23 because there the father openly and immediately manifesteth himselfe and his glorie and goodnesse and also communicateth them to the blessed 4 The Schoolemen call it Coelum Empyreum or the fierie heauen not because it burneth with fire but because it shineth with a light like fire But if Christ be ascended aboue all worldly heauens therfore his body is no longer in place because as Aristotle proueth in his first booke De coelo aboue all the heauens there is no place Although euery place be not of the same nature and such as Aristotle in his Physicks describeth yet notwithstanding wheresoeuer any bodie is there of necssitie is a space in which that body is contained according to that knowen saying of Augustine Tolle spatia locorum corporibus nusquam erunt c. Take away from bodies the space of places and they shall be no where and because they shall be no where they shall not be at all This space therefore is called in the Scriptures a place Iohn 14.2 I go to prepare a place for you But further we oppose the authoritie of Iesus Christ to Aristotles authoritie Doth not the ascension of Christ imply a contrarietie to that his saying Mat. 28.20 I will be with you vntill the consummation of the world It is not contrarie for Augustine saith He is both gone and is here also he will returne and he hath not forsaken vs Tract 50 in Iohan. for he hath caried his bodie into heauen but his Maiestie he hath not taken away from the world Therfore Christs saying is to be vnderstood in respect of his Diuinitie which is present in all places and at all times and cannot be contained in any certaine space of place seeing it containeth al things but especially it is meant cōcerning his perpetual actiue power presēce in the Church which worketh in the minds of them that beleeue not of the presence of his humanity which is finite and included in place In respect of which his humanitie he saith Iohn 12 8. The poore are alwaies with you but me you shall not haue alwaies And Mat. 24.23 he foretelleth that Antichrists should say Lo
he is here lo he is there And Paule bids that we shew forth the Lords death till he come 1. Cor. 11.26 What therefore is that which Paule saith Ephes 4.10 that Christ ascended aboue all heauens that he might fulfill all things The meaning is that he might poure out vpon the Church which consisteth both of Iewes and Gentiles his gifts and benefits by the holy Ghost a Ioh. 14.16 For so is the word of fulfilling taken b Isa 33· 5. Ierm 31 25 And this particle answereth to that which he said before out of Psalm 68.19 Hee ascended vp on high and gaue gifts to men the similitude being taken from Princes who after victorie obtained doe shew their liberalitie to all their people 1. Serm. de aduentu eyther by solemne feastes or largesses and gifts Or vnderstand it so as Bernard hath obserued that he might fulfill all things namely which were foretold and which were required to our saluation What witnesses were there of his ascension The Angels for it was fit that he who in his conception natiuite temptation death and resurrection had vsed the ministerie testimonie of Angels should now also vse the same for witnesses when he was to performe the greatest worke pertaining to his diuine maiestie 1 That he might mitigate their griefe which his Disciples tooke at their separation from their meekest Lord and Master by the promise of his future comming 2 That when the sight of the Apostles fayled they might shew the way into heauen as Chrysostome saith homilia de ascension● Domini 3 That they might teach that though he was absent in bodie yet he would defend his seruants by his spirit and protect them by the ministerie of Angels Besides this witnesse of the Angels the Disciples also were witnesses Who were the foretellers of this ascension Dauid a thousand yeares before it fell out saw this triumph in the Spirit and sang a song of victorie to Christ triumphing a Psal 68.5 Enoch the sonne of Iared the seuenth man from Adam a man verie godly and a Prophet was taken vp into heauen and did figure this ascension b Gen 5.24 Heb. 11.5 being suddenly made of mortall immortall and translated into eternall blessednesse c 1. Cor. 15 52. 1. Thes 4 17 But chiefely Elias being caried vp into heauen by a whirle wind on a fierie Chariot and horses that is which shined with light like fire d 2. King 2.11 was a notable testimonie and example not onely of the Lords ascension but also of eternall life For that which the Lord saith Iohn 3.13 No man ascendeth vp into heauen but he that hath descended from heauen the sonne of man which is in heauen is to be vndestood of the proper vertue of his ascension and his aduancement aboue all creatures But how doth the ascension of Elias differ from Christs ascension As a shadow differeth from a bodie or a picture from a quicke man For 1 Elias was translated into heauen without the panges of death that God by this publicke testimonie might auow and ratifie his doctrine and by this meanes might reclaime the Israelites from Idolatrie to sincere religion and pietie But Christ before he ascended suffered and died but he reuiued and manifested the glorie of his resurrection by ascending and confirmed also whatsoeuer was said or done by him 2 Elias ascended by the ministerie of Angels in a fiery chariot In homil ascensionis because as Gregorie saith Pure man needs the helpe of other things neither could he ascend into heauen by himselfe whom the impuritie of his flesh did oppresse and keepe downe Bvt Christ was caried vp into heauen not in a chariot but by his owne power without the ministerie of Angels because he who had made all things was by his owne power caried aboue all things 3 Elias left vnto Eliseus his cloke the gifts of the spirit doubled vpon him but Christ compassed his Disciples with his cloke that is he put vpon them power from aboue filling them with the gifts of the holy Ghost and gaue vnto them power to worke miracles double to his greater then his own a Ioh. 14.12 not in nature but in number and efficacie or with greater effect I say with greater power not of the Disciples but of their maister who wrought in them but especially the conuersion of the Gentiles vnto Christ by the preaching of the Gospell 4 Elias was made a Citizen of heauen but vnto a Christ alone is giuen a name aboue all names and he is become so much more excellent then Angels by how much he hath obtained a more excellent name then they haue Ephes 1.21 Phil. 2.9 Heb. 1.4 What is the end of this Triumph 1 That he might seale vnto vs the worke of our redemption being now complete and perfected and might testifie that eternall righteousnesse was brought vnto vs. For which cause Augustine calleth it the confirmation of the Catholike faith To the same effect is that Ephes 4.10 He ascended that he might fulfill all things namely all the oracles and prophecies which were extant of him such as was the foretelling of his ascension and which it behoued to be fulfilled to accōplish the work of our redemption 2 That he might giue a cleare testimonie of his Godhead by which mans nature was caried on high 3 That hauing ouercome death he might obtaine that glorie in his humanitie which before the foundations of the world were laid was prepared for him a Ioh. 17.5 For then Christs glory was made most apparant when as the new guest who was both God and man was entertained in heauen which then the Angels had not seene from beginning of the world To the same purpose is that which is said Psal 24.7 Ye Princes open your gates that the king of glorie may enter in 4 That he might prouide for vs a mansion and abode in the heauens and might put vs in certaine hope that our soules being separated from our bodies should go vnto him and that we also may ascend into heauen in bodie also at the last day for where the head is there also must the members be Iohn 14.3 What are the effects and fruits of the Lords ascension 1 Captiuitie was led captiue Christ triumphed ouer Sathan death sinne and hell of which it is said Coloss 2.15 And he hath spoiled principalities and powers and hath made a shew of them openly and hath triumphed ouer them in the same crosse 2 The sending of the Comforter that is the holy Ghost and that visibly namely on the fiftieth day after his resurrection Act. 2.1 c. Which the Apostles should not haue receiued vnlesse Christ in his bodie had departed from them Iohn 16.7 Then a visible powring out of diuers giftes of the same spirit vpon the Church Epist ad Dardanum And to this effect is that saying Ephes 4.10 He ascended that he might fulfill all things not in his
humanitie because as Augustine saith he gaue vnto it immortalitie but tooke not from it the proper nature thereof but by distributing the gifts of the Spirit into the hearts of all the elect in what place soeuer they be To the same purpose a●so Iohn saith cap. 7.39 The spirit was not yet giuen because Christ was not yet glorified 3 Away was opened for vs into our heauenly countrie for till that time Paradise was kept with a flaming sword but by Christs ascension heauen was opened from which we were by Adams transgression excluded 4 Possession of our heauēly inheritance is taken in all our behalfs so that we do not now in a bare hope only expect saluatiō but do indeed possesse it in our hart in our fl●sh Eph. 2.6 God hath raised him vp hath made vs sit togither with him in the heauēly places Therfore Tertullian speaketh thus Euen as he hath left vnto vs the earnest of the spirit so also he hath taken of vs the earnest of the flesh hath caried into heauen a pledge for the whole summe whith hereafter shall be receiued of him there Be ye therefore secure ye flesh and bloud for ye haue taken possession both of heauē the kingdom therof in Christ 5 As Leuit. 16.2 The high Priest yearely entred within the veile into the most holy place not without bloud that he might stand before God in the behalfe of the people so Christ is entred into heauen to make intercession for us as it is said Heb. 9.24 Christ is not entred into the holy places that are made with hands which are similitudes of the true Sanctuarie but is entred into verie heauen to appeare now in the sight of God for vs. Where he so turneth the eies of God vpon his owne righteousnes as he turneth them away from our sinnes and maketh vs a way to his throne and causeth him to become mercifull and gracious vnto vs who otherwise was very terrible to wretched sinners VVhat is the vse of this 1 That in the fear of sin death we may fly to the ascensiō of christ which is a most certain seale to vs of his cōquest ouer our enemies 2 That in temptation we may assure our selues there is one for vs in heauen which maketh intercession for vs and reconcileth vnto vs the father 1. Ioh. 2.1 My babes these things write I vnto you that ye sinne not and if any man sinne we haue an aduocate with the father Iesus Christ the iust 3 That by our hope of ascending to him hereafter we should comfort our selues in our losses 4 That seeing our bodie now liueth and reigneth in heauen and our conuersation is there we should abandon the delights of this life and aspire vnto heauenly things Coloss 3.1 If ye haue risen againe with Christ seeke the things that are aboue 5 That wee know how he seeth all things that all things are open to his eies a Heb 4.13 so that there is now no cause why we should be faint hearted VVhat is against this doctrine of Christs ascension 1 The position of the Vbiquitaries who make a doubt of the asascension who by ascending vnderstand vanishing or becomming inuisible as though in Christs ascension there were no motion of his bodie from place to place but onely a change so that he who before was visibly conuersant in the earth now being become invisible is notwithstāding truly corporally but yet inuisibly present with vs the same Sectaries make heauen the same thing that glory is and also make heauen a certain spirituall place without body which is euerywhere But this their doing is nothing else but to confound mingle the highest thing with the lowest and the lowest with the highest to denie the truth of Christs body 2 The manners of them who fauour their wicked affections are fast bound to this earth who do follow the works of the flesh and do by their deeds testifie they haue little care of heauenly things and by their vngodlines do rather plunge themselues into hell then labour to clime vp to heauen The eight and twentieth common Place Of the sitting of Christ at the right hand of the Father Is the sitting of Christ at the right hand of his father a d●stinct article from that of his ascension IT is For Saint Mark in his 16 chapter and 19. verse doth manifestly distinguish them when he saith that the Lord after he had spoken vnto them was receiued into heauē sat at the right hand of God Besides the ascension into heauen if ye respect the change of place is common to the word Incarnate to the Angels to Elias and the rest of the elect But to which of the Angels hath he said at anie time sit thou at my right hand Heb. 1.13 Therefore his sitting neither can nor ought to be confounded with his ascending What signifieth the right hand The right hand and left are proper differences of corporall positions are proper to man and not to God who is a spirit hauing no body Io. 4.24 and therfore hath neither right nor left side but is altogether vnmeasurable and infinite But because in the right hand a mans strength both most consisteth and is most perspicuous and the right hand is most fit for any action or exploit and more vsuall for the confirmation of faith therefore sometimes the right hand of a man is taken for a mans power stength hope or promise which he maketh as Psal 144.8 Their right hand is a right hand of falshood Moreouer from men by the Figure Metaphora or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is tra●slated vnto God And then 1. It signifyeth as the hand and the arme do the verue power helpe of God as Psa 44.3 Their owne arme shall not saue them but thy right hand and thy arme and the light of thy countenance And Act. 2.33 By the right hand of God Christ is exalted· 2 It signifieth the maiestie authoritie glorie and honour of the diuinitie Psal 110.1 Christ is commaunded to sit at the right hand of the Father 3 It signifieth the place of blisse and happines which we shall enioy in the life euerlasting Psal 16.11 At thy right hand are pleasures for euermore And Ephes 1 20· and he set him at his right hand in heauenly places VVhat signifieth sitting It properly signifieth that manner of setting of the bodie that is opposite to standing or motion But by the figure Metalepsis it signifieth to dwell to abide to conuerse to rest and sitting signifieth dwelling as Luke 24.49 Tarie ye in the Citie of Ierusalem vntill ye be endued with power from on high in the originall it is sit ye After which sort we say of a man he staied in that countey three yeares or he sate there three yeares Secondly it signifieth to rule and gouerne as 1. King 1 30. Salomon my sonne shall sit vpon my throne after mee and Pro. 20.8 A king that sitteth in
the throne of iudgement chaseth away all euill with his eies And of the gouernment of the Messiah Isa 16.5 In mercie shall the throne be prepared and he shall sit vpon it in stedfastnesse in the tabernacle of Dauid And in this sense sitting doth signifie a Royall or Iudiciall dignitie and authoritie But what doth it it signifie ioyntly Mat. 20● 2 or together to sit or to stand at the right hand of any man 1 In humane affaires by the figure Metonymia it signifieth to obtaine the next place of honor dignity to any man as Psa 45 9 Vpon thy right hand the Queene standeth in a vesture of gold siluer 2 To be a fellow and companion or copartner of the rule and Empyre 3 To giue helpe and aid as Psal 142.4 I looked on my right hand and beheld whether any stood by me that is to say to helpe me Metaphorically it is attributed to God to the Church to Christ himselfe As for God he is said to stand at the right hand of men when he doth helpe and succour them and protecteth them against their enemies and dangers as Psal 16.8 I haue set the Lord alwaies in my sight for he is at my right hand that I may not he moued-So is God the father in this sence said to stand at the right hand of Christ that is to say that he is in degree of honour and dignitie next vnto himselfe· Psal 45.10 The Queene 1. The Church doth stand at thy right hand namely at the right hand of Christ that is it standeth in the next degree of dignitie 3 Christ is said to b Mark 16.19 sit c Act. 7.55 stand and d Rom. 8.34 be at the right hand of God the father Is Christ said to sit at the right hand of the father properly or Metaphorically Not properly for it no way agreeth with his Deitie and although it may in the proper signification be attributed and applied vnto his other nature which is bodily yet it must not be imagined that that glorious body in heauen doth either continually sit or is moued or standeth although it be indeed limited and locall and as for the right hand of God much lesse is that to be taken properly seeing God is without a bodie as is alreadie said Seeing then Christ sitteth at the right hand of the father doth it therupon follow that the father sitteth on the leaft hand No indeed for the father is not limited and in euerlasting happines all is the right hand because there is there no miserie VVhat is therefore meant by this kind of speach In his exposition of the Creed Augustine taketh it for resting with the father in that euerlasting blessednes for this was conueniēt for Christ saith he after so many labours sustained after the crosse and after death to rest blessed in heauen not indeed idle for hee gouernes the Church and makes intercession for vs but yet without labour The same Augustine also calleth the right hand of the father that eternall and vnspeakable felicity Against the Sermon as Arius c 12. whereunto the sonne of man is attained hauing receiued immortalitie euen of the flesh 2 Damascen saith that Christ hath togither with his father equal glory of the diuinity which he had before all beginnings And in this sence the transitiue preposition to doth note only a personal distinction Lib. 4. cap. 2 and order of beginning but not any degree of nature or dignity for there is no such matter in the persons of the deity 3 But we say also that it is meant thereby that Christ hath obtained all power in heauen and in earth as he himselfe who is his owne best interpreter expoundeth it Mat. 28.18 by a phrase borrowed from a King or a Prince which hath a sonne and that an onely begotten sonne or a first begotten sonne whom at length he appointeth to be his heire and successor maketh to sit at his right hand that he may reigne with him may exercise the right of dominion ouer all things which appertaine vnto the kingdom of the cceed Chap. 4. Whereupon Saint Augustine saith thus By the right hand vnderstand the power which that man that was taken from God did receiue that he might come to be a Iudge who before came to be iudged For the father iudgeth no man but hath giuen all iudgement to the sonne that all men might honour the sonne as they honour the father Ioh. 5 22 What is then the sitting of Christ at the right hand of the father It is his exceeding glorious estate or the great high degree of Christs exaltation wherein he is placed by his father the truth of both natures still reserued in which estate Christ doth not only rest from labour and enioy vnspeakable glory and vnmatchable felicity but especially he is placed not only the head of the church but the king and gouernour of heauen and earth that togither with his father he may gouerne all things both in heauen and in earth all things created being subiect vnto him Whence doe you confirme this Exposition Out of the Psal 110.1 Sit saith the father to Christ on my right hand till I make thine enemies thy footstoole which Paul 1. Cor. 15.25 expounding saith He must raigne till he haue put all his enemies vnder his feet Therefore to sit is to raigne And Eph. 1.21 after the Apostle had said that Christ sitteth at the right hand of God in heauenly places he addeth for expositions sake that he is exalted aboue all principalities and powers and that all things are made subiect vnder his feet and that he is appointed head of the Church VVhat is the cause efficient The father by whose will and ordinance he sitteth at the right hand of the father Psal 110.1 Sit at my right hand And Ephe. 1.20 And God hath set him at his right hand in the heauenly places This sitting then is it of the whole person or onely of one of the natures namely of the humane Words phrases are to be taken according to the matter about which they are vsed For to sit at the right hand of the father doth declare two things For sometime it sheweth the great equalilitie of the diuine glorie maiestie power and honour sometime it signifieth the qualitie that is the high perfection and felicity of the flesh of Christ now that it is exalted vnto the right hand of God which the schoolemen call Habituall grace In the later signification therefore sitting is to be applied vnto the humane nature wherein the humane nature in Christ is more blessed then the rest of the creatures hath royal iudicial power ouer all creatures a Iohn 5.27 but in the former which is the chiefe and principal of the whole person because as the whole person was broght low so the whole also was exalted in the Resurrection ascending into heauen and sitting at the right hand of the father
vse by the speciall grace of God as he loued Iacob but hated Esau f Mala. 1.2 and this election is verie firme effectuall and eternall 6 Reprobation 6. Reprobation is contrary to election wherupon the reprobate are so called by a metaphor taken either from coūterfeit siluer which is reiected g Iere. 6.30 h Heb. 6.8 or from a barrē soile which is left vntilled as cursed of God But it is to be noted that election and reprobation are taken two waies In deed they are properly referred to the condition of man alreadie created and through his fall corrupted that by election there might be signified a separation which in very deed might be in time through an effectuall calling i Mat. 3.12 Iohn 17.6 Isay 9.2 1. Pet. 1.2 of certaine men from amongst the cast-away sort of mankinde and that from darknesse to lightl. But by reprobation is signified a neglect or a casting away of some who beeing left to themselues and their corruption are forsaken of God k Isa 6.9 But they are often vsed metonimically for the very decree of Election Reprobation which God hath decreed in himselfe as Eph. 1.4 He chose vs in himselfe before the foundations of the worlde were layde that wee might bee holy and blamelesse before him in loue The mysterie whereof is hidden from vs Although both of them are manifest to vs in due time by those causes meanes or effects which God hath expressed in his word 7. The booke of life 7. The booke of life is twofold The first a materiall booke which is called the Bible that is a booke of holy things penned by the Prophets and Apostles teaching the way of eternall life The second metaphoricall which after the Hebrues manner to whom a Booke signifieth a Catalogue or reckoning vp of certaine men as in Genes 51. Matth. 11. appeareth is attributed to God by a metaphor and similitude or anthropopathy and is often vsed for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is a foreknowing or knowledge of God It is threefold First wherein hee hath written as it were in his booke of remembrance all men generally not onely by name but also hath foreknowne them according to euery ones byrth fort qualitie and death before the framing of the world wherof Dauid Psal 139.16 In thy booke all were written when the very dayes were framed The second wherein are contained the deeds of them which are at any time liuing according whereunto they shall be iudged neyther are their deeds onely rherein contained but euen also their banishments teares sorrowes and afflictions of which the Psalmist speaketh Psal 56.9 a, Apoc. 20 12. Dan. 7.10 MalaC 3.19 The third in which are written as many as are appointed before hand to life and it is taken for the very election of those on whom God hath determined freely to bestow life eternall whose names are for that respect saide to bee written in that booke b, Exod. 32 32. which also is called the booke of the liuing c Esai 6.9 29. And the Lambes booke of life d. Apoc 20 12. Phil. 4 3. And 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 excellently may it be tearmed a Booke e. Dan. 12.1 ezech 139. the writing of the house of Israel and the closet of the Lord also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the booke of the Infranchisement of the Church and citie of God But their names are said to be written therein whom God by electing hath intitled and by intitling hath elected least any should thinke that he can hide from his owne conscience those thinges which are euill Moreouer least any should suppose that god hath no care ouer him for god hath as much care and knowledge of the number of his children and seruants as any the best and wisest father of a familie whereupon Luke 10.50 Reioyce saith Christ that your names are written in the heauens Againe in the like figure of speech Iud. 4. the reprobate are saide 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to bee prescribed of olde to this condemnation not with incke and paper for God needeth no bookes whereby to bee put in remembraunce but through his foreknowledge iudgement and diuine predestination and they that depart from god are said to be written in the earth Iere. 17.13 as on the other side Theophilact deuoutly vpon the 10. of Luke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hee hath written our names in the heauens not as branded but as in the remembrance and grace of God What is the order and processe of these wordes Although in god who is the sincerest essence and with whom all things are present they cannot be so distinguished yet in the course of Nature and in respect of our selues they may be so ranged successiuely that the first may bee the knowledge as also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or the generall foreknowledge of god 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or the purpose of god which is also called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or his counsell and decree f. Act 2.23 Eph. 1.13 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Predestination g. Rom 8.28 29. 4. Election which order thou hast Eph. 1.4.5 hee chose vs in Christ after that he predestinated vs but on the contrary Reprobation answereth Election 5. An effectuall calling in time which is subordinate to Election from eternitie and a casting off in time which is subordinate to reprobation Whereof Ro. 11.1 Hath God then cast off his people 6. Iustification followeth Vocation 7. and Glorification Iustification a. Rom. 8.30 as impenitencie or hardnesse of heart doth follow casting off and condemnation hardnesse of heart Whether is there Predestination or no That there is it is proued 1. by the testimonies of the Prophetes Exodus 33 34. I will haue mercy on whom I will haue mercie Ierem. 1.5 before I fashioned thee in the wombe I knew thee Malach. 1.3 Iacob haue I loued but Esau haue I hated 2 By the testimonie of Christ Iohn 3.18 I know whom I haue chosē 3 Of the Apostle 2 Pet. 1.10 Giue diligence that you may make your election calling sure in you b Rom. 8 28 9.15.98 Act. 13.48 As many as were ordayned to eternal life beleeued 4 By arguments because it is meete that God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who is not to be called to accompt should doe with his owne what shall please him and the same God being most wise and not subiect to change hath ordeined the creation of man to a certaine end not to an vncertaine euent VVhat is praedestination It is the eternall immutable and most wise purpose of God going in order before all the causes of saluation and damnation by which he hath decreed to adopt of his meere grace in Christ some out of all mankinde and those to call effectually to iustifie them through faith and to glorifie them by his iust iudgment to reprobate and put by others in Adam and themselues and to punish them for their sinnes
of thinges the setting and rising of one the same sun sleepe waking labour rest night and day the day is deade in the night and yet it with his brightnesse is renued to the whole word saith Tert. l. de Resur carnis Hereupon Iob. 17.12 After darknesse I hope for light 5. The Resurrection is also proued by naturall arguments An vnperfect thing is not capable of perfect happinesse The soule loosed from the bodie is as it were lame and maimed Therefore it ought againe to be ioyned to it owne body in regard of happinesse 2. That is not perpetuall which is against nature but for the soule to be seperated from the humane bodie is against the nature thereof because it is the beautie and subsisting 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the perfection of mans bodie and which preserueth the personage or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 subsistence of man departed and gladly desireth to put on it owne bodie againe Therefore the soule shall not for euer bee separated from the body 6. By the hand-writing of God written in the hearts of men that is by the testimonie of the conscience of the reward of the good and punishment of the bad which is most of all felt euen at the point of death as well of the vngodly whose conscience is then more tormented with the thought of their life wickedly led as of the godly who reioyce in the spirit vehemently that at length they are come to the desired hauen 7 By the consent of al saints before and after Christ exhibited in the flesh For the holy fathers being as it were strangers here therupon confessed that they sought for a citie to come a Heb. 11.13 And being so earnestly carefull of buriall professed that a new life was prepared for their bodies laid in graue b Gen. 2● 4 19. 47 3● Also the martyrs would neuer haue susteined most grieuous torments with so stout a courage if they had not hoped for the rewardes of their confession their bodies being raised vp in the life to come What is the efficient cause of Resurrection 1. The almightie God himselfe who hath determined that hee will raise vp the dead 2. The sonne 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 working with the Father Ioh. 5.21 As the Father raiseth the dead so the Sonne quickneth whom he wil also And Chap. 11.25 he saith I am the Resurrection and the life Moreouer Christ is the Author of Resurrection partly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is by the vertue of his Resurrection c Rom. 6.4 1 Cor. 15.20 partly by the power of his Diuinitie whereby he can subiect all things vnto himselfe d Thes 4.14 1 Philip. 3.21 partly by his most mightie voice and beck Ioh. 5.28 They which are in their graues shall heare the voice of the sonne of God and shall come forth 3. The holy Ghost Rom. 8.11 But if the spirit of him that raised vp Iesus Christ from the deade dwell in you he that raised vp Christ from the deade shall also quicken your mortall bodies by his spirit that dwelleth in you But although the Angels shall be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the ministers of Resurrection for they shall gather the Elect from the windes yet by no meanes can they be the causes of it e Math 24.31 25.32 VVhat are they that shall rise againe All of what sex or age soeuer that haue died from the beginning of the world to the end as well the godly as the vngodly but after an vnequall condition Ioh. 5.28 All that are in their graues shall heare the voice of the sonne of God shall come forth they which haue done good vnto the Resurrection of life they which haue done euill vnto the Resurrection of condemnation Mat. 25.32 All nations shall be gathered together before him Act. 24.15 Paule doth hope that there shall be a resurrection of the iust and vniust Whence springeth a double Resurrection one which is called the Resurrection of life which eternal life shal follow as you would say a liuely Resurrection the other of Iudgement or condemnation that is a Resurrection which condemneth a Dan 12.2 And because they are truely iudged to rise againe which rise vnto life eternall they are properly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and by way of excellencie called the sonnes of the Resurrection b Luk. 20.36 Although it is manifest also that the wicked shall rise againe that they may receiue eternall destruction which verily is not called life but death because a life so vnhappie ought not properly be called a life Whereas Rom. 8.20.21 the creature is said to bee subiect to vanitie vnder hope because it also shall bee deliuered from the bondage of corruption into the glorious libertie of the Sonnes of God doth it follow that the brute creatures shall also rise againe In no wise because neither are they created to immortalitie nor doe their soules outliue their bodies but die in their verie bodies But vnder the name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the frame of the world consisting of an heauenly and Elementarie region not the inhabitants therof is signified which frame subiected by God to a fraile and wauering condition for the sinne of man and by a Prosopopeia it is said to expect a repairing with an earnest desire which repairing shall bee manifested when the sonnes of God shall bee caried into glorie Whereof also there is mention made Act. 3.22 2. Pet. 3.13 Why is the Resurrection which is Christs singular blessing graunted to the wicked Because they shal indeede rise againe but by the benefit vertue and efficacie of Christs Resurrection which alwaies is to saluation and is insinuated in his members only c Rom. 6.8 But by the necessi●ie and efficacie of that decree of God which is Gen. 2.17 For in what daie soeuer thou shalt eate of that fruite you shall die the death Which decree for that it comprehendeth either death and indeed specially the second that is death eternall it must needes bee that the Infidels arise also but vnto their greater condemnation that they may suffer eternall punishments in their bodies also because it were but a small punishment to be taken away by the first death for an infinite goodnesse violated requireth an infinite punishment 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 What is the subiect of Resurrection Surely the whole man wholly and generally considered but not the whole substance of euery man particulerly for 1. Indeed the bodie onely as it dyed properly so also doth it arise properly but because the soule is immortall it is not said to rise againe but Metaphorically through a Eph. 2.1 Col 2.13 Regeneration from the bondage of sinne wherein it is dead 2. The soules of the godly that die in the Lord are receiued into heauen by Christ b luk 23.43 Act 7.59 Heb. 12 23 but the soules of the vngodly departing from their bodies are thrust downe into the bottomlesse pit for as
Lazarus was caried by the conduct of Angels into Abrahams bosome so was the rich man thrust downe into hell c luk 16.23 and therefore the soules can not be said to rise againe either from death or sleepe In this respect do wee confesse in the Creede the Resurrection of the flesh onely Yet because the soule returneth to quicken and gouerne the bodie and there is no resurrection without the soule it may be said to rise againe by accident Shall the same bodies in number or shall new bodies rise againe 1. The verie selfe same in number those truly without defect because Psal 34.21 The Lord keepeth all the bones of the Saints there shall not one of them be broken And there shall not a heire of your head perish Luk. 21.18 2. Because euery one shall beare in his bodie that he hath done bee it good or euill 2. Cor. 5.10 3. Because God hath consecrated the bodies of the faithfull to be Temples vnto himselfe d, 1. Cor 3 16.17 6 15 19 4. Because this corruptible bodie saith the Apostle 1. Cor. 15.53 must put on incorruption pointing with the finger a like quantitie and the verie same essence in number saith Tertul For he could not speak more expresly vnlesse hee should apprehend with his hands his owne skinne 5. Because the bodies of the wicked are subiect to the torment of hell e Math. 10 28 6. Because all that are in their graues shall heare the voice of God Ioh. 5.28 Men therefore shall not rise againe out of the fower Elementes as if they were made of a new matter as though the being the same againe could not be in the matter of an humaine bodie but onely in the forme thereof to wit in the soule as some vnconstant spirits would haue it and therefore man may bee said to rise againe the same in number Alber. oratio de Resurr for the form's sake namely the soule for although when a print is made in wax and marred againe the same forme remaineth not and therefore if it be againe made in the same wax it cannot bee called the same print in number yet the verie same wax remaineth so although the substantiall figure of mans bodie be confounded in the graue yet the bodie shal rise again the same in nūber because the selfe same matter with the properties making one and the same Indiuiduum indiuisible bodie shall be restored by the commaundement of God a Ioh. 2.18 7. Because Christ whose members wee are and to whose bodie our bodies shall be conformed receiued againe that bodie which he had caried about with him b Ioh. 2.19 8. Because it were absurd that Paule should be depriued of the reward of the Crowne in his bodie wherein he caried the markes of Christ So that euen as if a garment be ripped into pieces afterward bee againe sowed together it maketh all one garment no other in number or if the small wheele of a firelock bee taken in sunder afterward the ioynts therof also made cleane be ioyned and set together againe it is the same in number So shall the essence be all one of mans bodie which though dissolued shall againe be ioyned together by God and shall rise againe the infirmities and accidents being taken away which may bee wanting without destroying the essence And because God hath all the Elements readie at his beck no difficultie shall hinder him that hee may not command both earth and water ayre fire to restore that which seemeth to be consumed by them VVhat shall bee the forme or manner of the Resurrection When the last day shall appeare Christ on a sodaine and vnawares in the same visible forme wherein he ascended to heauen shall come in the clouds with Angels and thousands of his Saints Iud. 14. with the cheerefull voice of an Archangell and with the trumpet of God when at the voice and so at the sound of the trumpet Mat. 24.31 as in mount Sinai when the Law was promulged c Exod. 19.16 they shal be raised vp shal take againe their owne bodies who sleep in the dust to whom the act of coupling the soule and body togither a new after death or the returning of the soule at the commaundement of God into her owne bodie shall be the forme of Resurrection but they who shall be found liuing and remaining afterward in his comming shall be changed in a moment and in the twinckling of an eye 1. Cor. 15 52. d 1 Thes 4 15 16 this sudden change not of the substāce but of the quality of their bodies shal be vnto them in the steed both of death as also of resurrectiō that it might be true which is written Heb. 9.27 It is appointed vnto men that they shall once die When shall the Resurrection be Christ answereth But of that day and hower knoweth no man no not the Angels of heauen but my father only Mat. 24.16 What shall be the conditions and qualities of the bodies that rise againe Six especially are recited a 1. Cor. 15 32.43.53 1. Immortalitie for of mortall such as they are now they shal be made immortall 2. Incorruption of corruptible they shall become incorruptible it is sowne a bodie subiect to corruption it is raised in vncorruption 3. Spiritualnesse for of liuing creatures that is of such as are quickned with an humane soule and are maintained in this naturall and fraile life with outward succors as meats and other means ordained of God they shall be made b Gen. 1.29.40 1 Tim. 4.3 spirituall not in essence but in condition or qualitie by partaking of the gifts of the spirit 1. Because they shal be altogether ruled by the holy spirit 2. Because they haue wholly giuen themselues to the gouernment of the same spirit 3. Because being vpheld by the power of God they haue no neede of meates or other helps because they shall be endewed with an exquisite fine and sharp intelligence of the senses it is sowne a naturall body it is raised vp a spirituall bodie 4. Strength for of being weake and subiect to sundry calamities sicknesse and sorrowes they shall be made firme strong not subiect to any perturbation and able for it is sowne in weaknes but shall rise in strength and the soule shall so perfectly rule ouer the bodie that heauinesse and weight shall be no hinderance thereto whereby it shall come to passe that we shall be rapt with such a nimble motion of our bodies to meet the lord in the aire 1. Th. 4.17 5. Perfection for of being deformed altogether full of vncleannesse lame and filthy to behold they shall rise very beautifull comely to behold very seemely wanting no limme not young as children nor decrepit with yeares but of a ful age ripe and strong as also the bodies of Infants that die in their mothers wombe shal by that wonderfull worke of God receiue as Austin witnesseth such a body as
thirtieth common place Of the last Iudgement VVhat is signified in the Scriptures by the word Iudgement 1 COmmonly to iudge is to deeme to thinke and iudgement is taken for the opinion or meaning of the minde 2 It may be knowne what it is by the contrarie thereof for to iudge and to saue are contrary as therefore to saue is to free one from destruction and to giue life so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to iudge is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to condemne to destroy to giue cause of condēnation In which sense it is vsed Ioh. 3.17 God sent not his sonne into the vvorld that he should iudge the vvorld that is that he should cōdemne or rather be the cause of condemnation but that the vvorld might bee saued through him Whereupon iudgement is vsed for the cause of condemnation vers 19. This is the condemnation that that light came into the world and men loued darknesse rather then that light And for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 condemnation Ioh. 5 24. He that beleeueth in me hath life eternall and shall not come into condemnation 3 To iudge is to rule and gouerne as Iud. 3.10 and in other chapters where iudgement is taken for Rule and for the minde of the iudge and for equitie or for that which is iust and right a luk 11.42 And the iudge for the Magistrate b Exod. 2 14 all through And first surely when iudgement is attribured to God it is taken for the ful Rule vniuersal gouernment and administration wherewith the whole world standeth sure is preserued and gouerned c Ioh. 5 22 27 30 Gen. 18.25 2. For the gouernment and well ordered state of the Church whereby the father manifesteth the Gospell through the sonne maintaineth the ministerie bestoweth the holy Ghost quickeneth the deade by the word euen from the beginning to this day prepareth a kingdome for the sonne that is the Church Mat. 12 18 Behold my seruant whome I haue chosen I will put my spirit on him and he shall shew iudgement to the Gentiles 3. For Gods vengeance and punishment on sin sinners d 1 Pet 4 17 4. For Gods preceps or commandements e Psal 19.9 119 13 30 throughout 5 To iudge doth signifie to reprehend others faultes by the example of ones owne vertue f Math 12 27 41 42. c 19.28 Luk. 22 30. The Apostles shall iudge the twelue tribes of Israell that is the Apostles faith and Doctrine shal take all excuse away from the Israelites So Ro. 2.27 6. To iudge doth properly belong to the Iudge when he giueth sentence whereby either he condemneth or iustifieth one that is he doth indeede condemne by pronouncing him guiltie of the fault and by adiudging him to punishment but he doth iustifie when he freeth any one from the crime and punishments due to the crime And in this sense iudgement is the Lords cēsure freeing the elect and pronouncing them heires of eternall life but cōdemning the reprobate How manifold is the Lords iudgement Twofold Particular or Antecedent temporall and hidden which is either of many or of euery one in the time of euery ones life or death for that the Lord either in this life doth defend those that are his according to his promise The gates of hel shal not ouercome it Mat. 16.18 or chastiseth them when they erre with warr famine pestilence or with some other kinde of punishments that they may not be condemned with this world g 1. Cor 11 32 Whereupon 1. Pet. 4.10 Iudgement beginneth at the house of God or finally receiueth their soules into heauen and on the contrarie keepeth downe the wicked and punisheth their sinnes diuerse waies and at length deliuereth their soules to Sathan to be tormented h Luk. 16 22 29 2 Vniuersall extreame manifest finall absolute eternall is that which shall be in the last day when the bodies are raised vp of which we must principally heere entreat By what arguments is it declared that the iudgement shall be vniuersall and extreame 1. Because iudgment and Resurrection are so necessarily ioyned the one to the other and it cannot bee that God can iudge of all men which are deade vnlesse hee raise them from the deade nor can resurrection be assigned to any other end then that God might iudge all men might separate the sheepe from the goats the corne from the chaffe the godly from the vngodly a Mat. 25 13 2. It is declared by a remarkable principle in nature which teaeth that God i● iust and therefore it must needes be well with the good and euill with the wicked for euer which because in this life it cannot be for that there are so many wicked men and Atheists who commit all kinde of wickednesse whom neuerthelesse God doth not take vengeance on in this life againe for that there are godly men and some that worshippe God sincerly who liue a most troublesome life so farre is God from rewarding them in this life b necessarie is it that there should bee a certaine and vnfallible iudgement remaining afterward wherein the wicked might be punished and the good may receiue the reward of piety Cor 15 19 3. Bur farre more certainly is it shewed by testimonies of holie Scripture Psal 9.8 The Lord hath prepared his throne for iudgement and shall iudge the world in righteousnesse and 50.1 The God of Gods hath spoken and called the earth from the rising of vp the sun vnto the going downe thereof our God shall come and shall not keepe silence that he may iudge all men Isa 66.15 Behold the Lord shall come in fire Mat. 25.31 and so following all the whole act of iudgement is described Luk. 8.17 There is not any thing hid that shall not be euident Ioh. 12 48. The word that I haue spoken shall iudge him in the last day Rom. 2 16. God shall iudge the secrets 1 Cor. 3 13. Euery mans worke shall bee made manifest Heb. 9 27. It is appointed vnto men that they shal once dy after that commeth the Iudgemēt Iud. 14 15 ver Enoch the seauenth from Adam prophecyed of such saying Behold the Lord commeth with thowsands of his Saints to giue iudgement against all men to rebuke all the vngodly among them of all their wicked deedes Therefore must their needes bee a Iudgement 4. We confesse in the Apostles Creede that Christ shall come to iudge the quick and the dead What is the last iudgement It is the act of Iudgement whereby Christ in the last day shall presently after the resurrection of the deade pronounce sentence vpon all men with great maiestie and glorie separating the elect from the reprobate and adiudging them to eternall life but the reprobate to vnquenchable fire What are the efficient causes of the iudgement to come 1. The eternall God Father Sonne and holy Ghost inseparably for as much as there belongeth to the iudiciall power dominion
c 2. Thess 2 8 Revel 20.10 whome the Lord at that time chiefly will destroy with the spirit of his mouth that is by the preaching of the Gospel and after vtterly abolish in his glorious comming that is when he shall returne in glorie vnto iudgement which the Epithite glorious comming sheweth 4. The vnreasonable creatures also the heauen and earth and whatsoeuer is contained in them shall be iudged in their manner For 2. Pet. 3.7.10.11.12 The heauens and earth are reserued vnto fire against the day of condemnation and of the destruction of vngodly men and the heauens shall passe away with a noyse that is from mutabilitie to immutabilitie and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 incorruption and the Elements shal melt with heate and be dissolued and the earth with the workes that are therein shall be burnt vp but not as touching the Essence as if this most goodly frame of the world were to be brought to nothing for then where should Christ execute his iudgement but that it is to be restored to a better more excellent forme as touching the corruptible qualities all those things being taken away which are vnperfect and transitorie certaine filthinesse dregs of mortality being put away purged by fire as it were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hauing the vertue of cleansing as gold in the fornace as it is saide 1. Cor. 7.31 The fashion of the word goeth away not the propertie And Rom. 8.22 We knovv that the vvhole vvorld groneth vvith vs also and trauaileth in paine together vnder hope that it also shall be deliuered from the bondage of corruption into the glorious libertie of the sons of God So Act. 1.21 a restauration of all things is promised So Ps 102.72.28 The heauens shal perish and they shal all waxe old as a garment as a garment shalt thou fold them and they shal be changed namely to the better And Reuel 21 1. I saw a new heauen So Isaiah 65 17. and 66.22 New heauen and a new earth that is renewed are promised Therfore Peter addeth verse 13 We looke for new heauēs a new earth according to his promise wherin dwelleth righteousnesse but it is not reuealed in the Scriptures what manner of restauration this shall bee For vvhat things shall iudgement be giuen For the faith and vnbeleefe of euery one according to the effects of either a Math. 12.36.37 for euery idle word how much more for grieuous sin shall there an account bee giuen in the day of iudgement euen of them that doe not embrace the satisfaction of Christ Rom. 2.16 The Lord will iudge the secrets of men And chap. 14.12 Euerie one shall giue an account for himselfe vnto God 2. Cor. 5.13 Euerie ones worke shall be manifest for the day will declare it and the fire will trie euerie mans worke what it is although this day may be better vnderstood of the light of truth driuing away the darknesse of ignorance and shining in our mindes as fire And 2. Cor. 5.10 All must be made manifest that euerie one may receiue according to what he hath done be it good or euill The like Reue. 20.12 Whereupon saith Augustine In what facts euery man shall be found when he departeth from his bodie in the same shall he be iudged VVhat shall the forme of this iudgement be It cannot be declared but yet the Scripture shadoweth it vnder the figure of a most iust and royall iudgement a Math. ●4 30.31 25.31 50. follow Math 13 26 1 Thess ● 4 And it doth consist in preparation sentence and execution of the sentence giuen The preparation shall be on this wise 1 As a theefe commeth in the night so shall Christ on a sodaine come visibly from heauen from whence we are bidden to looke for him in his maiestie that is in diuine power in heauenly brightnsse in glorification of bodie in authoritie to iudge and in the guard or company of all his Angels and armed with flaming fire b 2 Thes 1.8 Psal 50.3 A fire shall goe before him he shall not then come alone humble despised neither vnto affliction as in the first comming c Math. 11.29 Isa 53.5 2 He shall sit on the throne of the glorious maiestie d Math 19.28 but what the throne may be no man must enquire yet for certaine it shall appeare corporally and visibly in the clouds of heauen apparent to the eyes of all men Act. 1.11 and Reue. 1.7 Behold he commeth with clouds and euerie eye shall see him yea euen they which pierced him thorow 3 He shall gather together by the ministerie of the Angels all nations before him so that not any how wicked and mightie soeuer can withdraw himselfe or be absent escape flie from or resist thar appearance 4 He shall separate them one from another as a shepheard doth seuer the sheepe from the goats and he vvill set the sheepe that is those who haue heard his voice and haue embraced his sheep like innocencie on his right hand but the goates that is those who despising their shepheard haue followed their owne wantonnesse and lust like goates on his lest 5 He shall giue a double definitiue sentence and that in order The first shall be most earnestly wished for of all the Elects for the King shall say to them that shall be on his right hand with a singuler affection of fauour and loue commending and setting forth the grace God and his free adoption his Election from the beginning and blessing in Christ not their merits Come ye blessed of my father and possesse for your inheritance the kingdome prepared for you since the foundations of the world were laid Whereunto he will adde a reason of the cause taken from the fruits of faith declaring the cause that is from the works of mercie performed vnto him in his members For I was an hungrie and ye gaue me to eate c. The second shall be most fearefull For turning vnto them that shal be on his left hand he will say vnto them depart from me ye cursed into hell fire which is prepared for the diuell and his Angels Whereunto in like sort he will adde the reason of the cause for I was an hungrie and ye gaue me not to eate c. 6 The execution of the sentence shall presently follow the sentence For the reprobates being expulsed by the Angels from the Lords presence shall will they nill they be compelled by his glorious strength to goe into eternall torment a 2. Thess 1.8 9 but the godly shall be taken into the ayre to meete the Lord that they may enioy eternall life and blessed immortalitie with Christ b 1. Thess 4 17 After what law will Christ giue sentence Although the godly shall be freed also from the word of the law in as much as Christ hath fulfilled it for them and by the same law which appointeth euerie sinner to eternall punishments shall the wicked be condemned yet
the last iudgement shall not so much be squared by the word of the Law as of the Gospell which the Apostles haue preached according to that Ioh. 3.36 He that beleeueth in the sonne hath euerlasting life and he that beleeueth not the sonne shall not see life but the wrath of God abideth him And chap. 12.48 The word that I haue spoken it shall iudge him in the last day And Rom. 2.16 The Lord shall iudge the secrets of men according to my Gospel by Iesus Christ For the sentence in that generall iudgement shall be nothing else but a manifesting or declaring or the sentence now before vttered in this life by the ministerie of the word as concerning the iustification and condemnation of all VVhat are the noats or properties and Epithites of the last iudgment The Apostle Rom. 2.5 reckoneth vp three 1. for he calleth it the day of wrath that is of vengeance because vengeance shall be taken on all who in this life haue not beleeued the Gospell So Sophoniah 1.15 That day shall be a day of wrath a day of trouble and heauinesse a day of destruction and desolation a day of obscuritie and darknesse a day of clouds and blacknes so called indeed in respect of the wicked which day shall be a day of reioycing to the godly 2 The day of Reuelation because heere things are hid but there the thoughts words deeds of all the reprobates how secret soeuer shall by the diuine and omnipotent power of the Iudge be laid open Reuel 20.12 And I saw the dead both great and small stand before God and the bookes were opened and another booke was opened which is the booke of life and the dead were iudged of those things vvhich vvere vvritten in the bookes according to their vvorkes But of the Elect the Lord speaketh Ier. 31.33 and Heb. 10.17 Their sinnes and iniquities will I remember no more 3 Hee calleth it a day of iust and vpright iudgement least any should think saith Chrysostome that the iudgement of God shoud proceed from an angry mind and that none might thinke that the Iudge will take vengeance otherwise then iustice doth sway the iudgement It is called also by way of excellency The day of the Lord and of Christ wherein he shall come with his glorie and maiestie a ●uk 17.34 1 Cor 5 5 Philip 1.6 And day of iudgement b Mat. 10 15 12 36. And the last day 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is the vttermost last day c Ioh. 6.39.40 by a significatiō taken from time because those which fall out at the last are most strange vnto vs VVhat are the forewarnings of the iudgement to come e Deut 27.26 Gal. 3.15 1 The sentence of death pronounced against transgressors before the fall of our first parents d Gen 2 17 2 The same sentence repeated in the lawe by the voyce of God 3 The hand-writing of God in the consciences of men their consciences bearing witnesse vnto them and their thoughts mutually accusing and excusing themselues in the day wherein the Lord shall iudge the secrets of men Rom. 2.15.16 4 The examples of God seuerity such as was the deluge in which the whole world perished Noe and his family excepted f Gen. 7. ●1 The burning of Sodom out of which iust Lot was saued g Gen 19.24 25 The destruction of the Citie of Ierusalem the basenesse and ouerthrow of the Iewish ciuill gouernment 5 Calamities both publike and priuate to be short the death also of the bodie are the beginning resemblances of the iudgement to come VVhat are the signes and tokens thereof They are manifold some going before others ioyned nigh therunto and of precedent signes some are happened long since which are farre distant from the end as 1. The publishing of the Gospell in all the habitable earth or amongst all nations h Math. 24 14 2 That securitie and gluttonie long agoe waxing strong as it was in the daies of Noah which were before the Deluge a Moth 24 37.38 3 Apostacie from wholesome doctrine wherof 1. Tim. 4.1 The spirit speaketh euidently that in the later times some shall depart from the faith and shall giue heed vnto spirits of errour 4 Generall corruption of manners b 2. Tim 3 1.2.3 5 The reuealing and comming of Antichrist 2. Thes 2.3 The day of Christ shall not come except the man of sinne be disclosed and 1. Iohn 2.18 Little children it is the last time and as ye haue heard that Antichrist shall come euen now are there many Antichrists whereby we know that it is the last time 6 Persecution and betraying of the Godly for the name of Christ 7 Pulicke offences d math 24 10 8 False Christes and many false Prophets saying I am Christ that is vsurping the name of Christ or faining that they are sent of Christ c math 24.9 Luk 21 1. that they are that which Christ is and shewing signes and miracles to seduce the verie elect if it were possible e luk 21.8 Math. 24 11 9 Neglect of charitie vers 12. and want of faith Others going next before which notwithstanding the ende shall not presently ensue and that in heauen Mark 13.3 The sunnne shall be darkened that is there shall be Eclipses of the sunne often The moone shall not giue her wonted light The starres shall fall from heauen that is seeme to fall The powers of heauen shall be shaken for these things are to be vnderstood properly not in a borrowed sense 2 In the earth great Earthquakes troubles and tumults For Nation shall rise vp against Nation and Kingdome against Kingdome Luke 21 9.10 Nor shall there be any place free from warres there shall be hunger and pestilence and fearefull things and people shall be in anguish and at their wits end with desperation f Mark 13 7.8 and in the Sea there shall be fearefull noises and tumults or inundations of the Sea and waters g Luk 21.25 4 In the ayre fearefull and terrible tempests In a word the heauen and earth and euen all the Elements shall in a sort resemble the countenance of an angrie Iudge that sinners being admonished may repent vnlesse they desire sodainely to perish 5 Vnto these is also added the conuersion or gathering together of Israell that is of the whole Nation in generall vnto the Church of Christ after that the fulnesse of the Gentiles shall come in Isay 29.20 Rom. 11 25.26 which neuerthelesse after what sort and when it shal be is not knowne The signes adioyning thereunto are wailing sorrowing of all the kinreds of the earth and the signe of the sonne of man which shall be seen in the heauen when the Lord commeth in the clouds a Math. 24.30 which some interpret to be the figure of the Crosse others great glorie and maiestie which shall testifie that Christ is at hand When shall the iudgement be This is
their hands and that he shall be our Iudge whose brethren we are and the members of his bodie who is a most louing Iesus that is a Sauiour Patron Aduocate Redeemer and Intercessor for vs who laid downe his life for vs and who hath solemnly promised euerlasting life to all them that beleeue in him Rom. 8.32 VVho shall condemne It is Christ that maketh intercession Whereupon we haue good cause to wish for that day according to the saying of Christ When these things beginne to come to passe then looke vp for your redemption draweth neere Luke 21.28 So that it is a merueile which Tertullian in his Apolegetic cap. 38. writeth that Christians were wont to pray for the deferring of the end seeing we daily desire the comming of Gods kingdome 3 It terrifieth the wicked because him whom now they refuse for their Sauiour they shall finde to be their iudge who shall adiudge them to eternall torments VVhat is contrarie hereunto 1 The heathens opinions of the worlds eternitie 2 The Decree of Origen and the Chiliasts that at length a thousand yeares after the Resurrection all shall be saued 3 The errour of them who beside the iudgement that ensueth presently at the first seperation of soule and bodie thinke there doth not an other vniuersall iudgement remaine And of others who thinke that the soules of the godly are not rewarded in heauen nor the soules of the vngodly punished in hell before the day of iudgement 4 The wicked opinion of those mockers who denie or contemning that iudgement or scoffingly asking when that shall be which is so long deferred 2. Pet. 3.3 who so soone as they heare that the last iudgement shall bee cauill As the Epicures and Stoicks cauilled Act. 17.32 following Manilius who saith The fathers savv no other neyther shall posteritie beheld any other 4 The curiositie of them who eyther vpon some fained Reuelation as the Circuncellions the Anabaptists the Enthusiasts who were wont to spread their prophecies amongst the common sort and to set downe the verie certaine yeare moneth and day of iudgement or vpon some position and aspect of the Starres or on some imaginarie supputations of numbers and times or on Arithmeticall calculations as this Platonists or are giuen to iucidiall Astrologie or on common prophecies or on humane authority dare define that time as they who repeat I know not what Rabbines dreame as if it were a diuine Oracle pronounced by E●ias Six thousand yeares the world shall last two thousand years before the Lawe two thousand vnder the Lawe two thousand ●fter the Lawe and then shall the end be which saying may by the Historie it selfe be confuted as vaine because there was two thousand fiue hundred and thirtie yeares before the Lawe and fewer by many then two thousand yeares under the Law and it is manifestly contrarie to the saying of Christ Act. 1.7 For the end of the world doth depend neyther on the Law of nature or on course or any other cause but on the pleasure and secrete will of God onely The nine and thirtieth common Place Of Eternall life How many kindes or differences of life doe the Diuines make THree 1 There is a life of nature which the Apostle calleth an Animall life of the naturall soule being the better part of man a 1. Cor. 2.17 15 47 whereby the good and bad doe in this world one among another liue are quickened doe perceiue and vnderstand which may also be called a Bodily Temporall Naturall and Present life Whereunto the first or naturall death which is a dissolution of the bodie and the soule is opposed 2 There is a life of grace which Gods children onely in the spirituall kingdome of Christ doe enioy in this world which by way of excellency is called The life of God not so much for that it is from God as all the other three kinds of life also are as because God liueth in them that are his that this life he sheweth and approoueth b Ephe. 4.18 and it is called for the same respect The life of Christ because Christ liueth in his through a supernaturall faith and spirit and they liue vnto God and conforme their life vnto his will c Gal. 2.20 and it is called a new life a Christian life and a Renewing of the mind will and affections and it is also called a new creature a new man supernaturall and spirituall which is opposed to death in sinne and to the old man a Col. 3.3 3 There is a life of glorie whereby the soule being ioyned againe to her owne bodie shall lead a life which the Apostle calleth spirituall not in respect of the substance but of the qualities 1. Corinth 15.44 whereby the faithfull shall liue for euer and it is laid vp in Christ and in the end of the world shall be disclosed a and which is opposed to the second death and is called eternall whereof only here we are to intreat But how manie waies is aeternall life taken Two waies 1. Metonymically both for the way that is in the meanes and manner of comming to the inheritance of heauen Iohn 3.36 He which beleeueth on the sonne hath aeternall life And Cap. 17.3 This is eternall life that they acknowledge thee to be the onlie true god and whome thou hast sent Christ Iesus where by the way we may note Thee and whome thou hast sent Christ Iesus to be the subiects in this proposition and the only true God the praedicates of either subiect Also for Christ himselfe 1. Iohn 5 20. This is the true God and life eternall Efficiently indeed as he is God but as he is man and died for vs in part materially because sinne which is the cause of death was purged in his flesh in part also efficiently but by a secondarie meanes namely by his intercession good will and vertue of his sacrifice by the communication of his flesh with vs and of forgiuenes of sinnes and of life eternall which is therein partly also instrumentally because the deity quickeneth vs by reason of the substantiall vniō through the flesh And after this sense is life aeternall begunne in the faithfull in this life 2 Properly for the estate of the blessed after this life whereof Iohn in the same 3. chapter 16. verse whosoeuer belieueth on the sonne can not perish but hath euerlasting life And. 3.7 to Tit. 9. We are heires according to the hope of eternall life By what arguments doe we proue that there is a life eternall 1 From the nature of God for seeing there is a god and the same is liuing and eternall it followeth necessarily that there is a life eternall whereby god liueth and is eternall 2 From the condition of the soule for seeing that it is immortall it followeth that there doth remaine an other life after this wherein the soule liueth by it selfe though seperated from the body and in which life she acknowledgeth and praiseth god highly 3
From the resurrection of bodies for there would be no neede of the rising againe of the bodies of the faithful if there were not a life whereunto they should rise Moreouer the articles concerning GOD of Christ of the Prouidence and of the Iustice of GOD of the soules Immort●●●●e of the resurection of bodies of the last iudgement could not stand vnlesse this article of life eternall bee annexed vnto them 4 From the handwriting of God written in the soule of euery one for the soule it selfe often teacheth vs there remaineth a iudgment with the feare whereof they are vexed who liue wickedly and they are renued in hope who loue godlines 5 From an Argument tending to absurditie because if only in this life that is if we hope in Christ for this life sake onely so that our faith hath respect to nothing else beyond this life we were the most miserable of all men 1. Cor. 15.19 6 From the testimonies of Scripture Dan. 12.2 some shall awake vnto euerlasting life Math. 25.46 The iust shall goe vnto life eternall Iohn 10.28 I giue vnto my sheepe eternall life Hebr. 13.14 Here we haue no continuing Citie but we seeke one to come 1. Iohn 25. This is the peomise that he hath promised vs euen eternall life 7 From examples for Enoch beeing translated heere into and afterward Elias were as an earnest penie thereof a Gen. 7 24. Heb 11 8 2 Kings 2 11 So was Christ also ascending into the heauen whose pleasure is that where he himselfe is we should be with him likewise Iohn 14.3 and 17.24 8 This an article of our fath I beleeue that life euerlasting What are the Epithites whereby it is commended in Scripture 1 In commendation it is called the kingdome 1 of God 2 of the father 3 of heauen b Math. 7 21 2 Metaphorically Abrahams bosome c Luk. 16 22 by a Metaphor taken from the bosome of parents wo are said to haue and carie their little children in their bosome because the faithfull like deerely beloued children being recouered out of this miserable world are cherished and refreshed in the embracing of the father of all the faithfull and are safe and free from all the perilous stormes of this life And there is a place wherin Christ hath prepared vs a mansion as himselfe declareth Math. 8.11 Many shall come from the East and from the West shall sit downe with Abraham Isaack and Iacoh in the kingdome of heauen Augustine though where it should be Epist 99 ad Evodion confese Lib. 9 3 confesseth he knoweth not yet defineth it to bee an habitation of secret rest and affirmeth that therein li●● the spirits of the blessed and there they enioy the gladsome presence of God 3 Analogically or by proportion Paradise or a place of delight and pleasantnesse e luk 23.43 by allusion to that garden planted in Eden of the situation whereof it is fond to dispute seeing it is manifest that the vniuersall earth was made waste by the Deluge 4 The house of the father a Ioh. 14.2 5 Metonymically the fulnesse of ioyes b Psal 16.11 6 The Lords ioy c Math. 25.21 7 The new holy and durable Ierusalem that shall be d Heb. 13.14 Reuel 21.10 8 An inheritance immortall and vndefiled and that withereth not reserued in heauen e 1. Pet. 1.4 9 The glorie of God because that eternall life consisteth in the communication of Gods glorie Rom. 3.23 All haue sinned and are destitute of the glorie of God 10 Our glorie for this is that alone wherein we may rest safely 1. Cor. 2.7 We speake the wisedome of God in a mysterie euen the hid wisedome which God had determined before the world vnto our glorie 11 Rest f 2. Thess 1.7 12 Refreshing g Act. 3.19 13 Peace h Luk. 1 79 14 So great happinesse as cannot be contained neither in the eies nor eares nor mind of any man i Psal 31 20 Isai 64 4. 1. Cor. 2.9 But why is it called eternall Because it shall neither be temporarie or determined in any certaine limits neither is it short vaine or subiect to any change as this our life is k Gen. 3 19 Ioh 14 5. and although it haue a beginning yet shall it neuer be taken away from them to whom it shall once be giuen l Math. 25 34 but shall last for euer without end What is life eternall It is a glorious estate wherein the elect being most perfectly ioyned vnto Christ their head after the Resurrection that shall be of the dead m Rom. 8 29 1 C●r 15.49 Phil. 3.21 Reve. 2 31 shall know God with his Angels in heauen after such a manner that we are not worthie yet to speake of and shall enioy his presence and praise him for euer hauing obtained the soueraigne good that Christ hath purchased for vs and shall be conformable vnto his likenes in bodie and soule as he is man Or it is the state of the blessed after this life wherein shall be a perpetuall acknowledgement of God perpetuall righteousnesse without sinne and death continuall ioy free from trouble griefe heauines and mourning n Ioh. 17.13 24 Isa 25 8. Reve 7.16 17 21.4 In a word eternall life shall be a certaine perfection of soules and bodies wherein there shall be nothing blame-worthie but according to the pleasure of God all things shall perfectly serue the will of Christ the Creator and Redeemer VVhat are the causes of euerlasting life The principall cause is God who of his mercie and free goodnes giueth and bestoweth it on vs through and for Christ our mediator a luk 12 32 Rom. 6 23. Eph. 1.5 2.5 luk 12.32 Iohn 6.40 This is the will of him that sent mee that euery man which seeth the sonne and beleeueth in him should haue euerlasting life and 1. Iohn 5.11 The meritorious very efficient cause is Christ onely Iohn 14.6 I am saith hee that way and that truth and that life The instrumentall offering and reuealing is the Gospell b Rom. 1.16 17 The instrumentall receiuing cavse is faith 1. Pet. 1.9 Receiuing the end of your faith euen the saluation of your soules The sealing cause is the holy Ghost c Eph. 1.13 14. but good workes and afflictions are not the cause of receiuing but the way of the kingdome saith Bernard And Act. 14.22 Through many tribulations must we enter into the kingdome of heauen Why is the gate called straite and the way narrow which leadeth vnto life Math 7.14 1 Because it was vtterly vnknowne and not to be found out by humane reason but Christ hath reuealed it vnto vs. 2 Because there is one onely passage vnto life through Christ not many 3 Because few enter in thereat if we compare them with the fashions of the world as the way of vertue compared to the waies of vices is narrow for that it hath but
worship of God c 2. Cor. 10.1 6 2 They differ in the proper end For the ende of the magistrate is that he may keepe the societie of men in peace and quietnesse instruct them by good lawes preserue and keepe safe the bodies and goods of his Citizens and maintaine and defend their liues namely so farre forth as they are inhabitants of this world doe liue vpon this earth a Rom. 13.2.5 1 Tim 2 2 albeit euen by him God will haue that same 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of Religion to be preserued as 2. Chron. 15.13 King Asa made a law on this manner If any man seeke not the Lord God of Israell let him die But the direct end of the Pastors is that they may build vp gouerne instruct and teach the consciences of the Citizens of the Church by the word of God so farre forth as they are freemen of the kingdome of heauen and are in time to be gathered together in heauen b Eph. 1● 8 Phil. 3.20 Coloss 3.2.3 whence it is that the Ecclesiasticall authoritie is called Ius poli or the law of heauen and the ciuill authoritie is called Ius Soli or the lawe of the land or soyle 3 They differ in forme for ciuill authoritie for the most part is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and Arbitrarie and therefore Praetory or Dictatory consting in the pleasure of those vpon whom it is bestowed for they haue power of life and death and authoritie to make lawes But the gouernment Ecclesiasticall is onely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ministratorie bounded within certaine limits and lawes by God himselfe the onele lawgiuer For the Church hath receiued lawes of beleeuing but she makes no lawes neyther can she alter those lawes she hath but must preserue and keepe them and hath no power but as a Deputie or Vicegerent and that at the wil of the Lord and doth onely as an Eccho resound and deliuer that vnto others which it hath heard God speaking in the scriptures a Malach. 2 6.7 Ezech. 3.17 Ier. 23.28 Mat. 28.20 4 They differ in the manner both of their iudgement and execution For the Magistrate iudgeth according to the lawes of man made by himselfe he himselfe weaueth the iudgement webb he condemneth the offender against his will yea though he denie that fact yet by the mouth of witnesses he condemneth him as truly guiltie b Deut 19 15. Mat. 18.16 But the Ecclesiasticall authoritie iudgeth onely according to the written word of God it weaueth not the webb of iudgement but summarily knoweth the whole matter through Charitie and by the mouth of the sinner himselfe and then when he hath confessed the matter then doth he know him as guiltie and exhorteth him to repentance c Mat. 15.25 16 1 Cor 5.4.5 2 Cor. 2.7 7.11 Moreouer the ciuill authoritie executeth iudgement with the carnall sword with fine with imprisonment marshall force with death it selfe the Ecclesiasticall gouernment executeth her decrees with the sword of the spirit that is the word of God namely with censures reproofe suspension and lastly excommunication a 2 Thes 3 14 1 Tim. 1.20 For that the Apostles did sometimes vse corporall punishment b Act. 5.5 13.11 it was a matter extraordinarie when the Magistrate was a wicked man So that the one doth not take away the other but establisheth it Of how many sorts is the Ecclesiasticall authoritie or gouernment Of three sorts the authoritie of Ministerie of Order and of Reproofe or Ecclesiasticall gouernment whereof hereafter in his proper place What is the power of Ministerie It is the authoritie or power of teaching in the Church not euerie thing but that alone which the Lord hath prescribed by his Prophets and Apostles and of administring those Sacraments which he hath instituted according to his ordinance and of blessing of mariages according to the perpetuall vse of the Church which power doth belong onely to the Pastors though oftentimes Deacons in these things haue supplied the Pastors roomes And this is that that is specially meant by the termes of the keyes and of opening and shutting c Mat. 16.19 And it is the former part of the keys for the later part belongeth vnto the discipline of excommunication What is the first part of these keyes Nothing else but the preaching of the Gospell committed vnto the ministers wherby is pronounced vnto the beleeuers free remission of sinnes through Christ and to the vnbeleeuers is denounced the reteining of their sinnes For that which Christ said vnto Peter Math. 16.19 I will giue thee the keyes of the kingdome of heauen whatsoeuer thou shalt binde or loose vpon earth shall bee ratified in heauen Saint Iohn thus properly expoundeth it Iohn 20.23 Receiue the holy Ghost whose sinnes ye remit they shall be remitted and whose sinnes yee retayne they shall be retayned in heauen How many Keyes are there Although there be but one ministerie of the word wherby sins are loosed and bound and therefore there is but one key to open and shut the kingdome of heauen yet notwithstanding in regard of the diuers obiects and effects the Key is accompted to be two fold one loosing or opening the other binding or shutting inasmuch as the same Gospell is the power of God to saluation to euery one that beleeueth Ro. 1.16 the sauour of death vnto death to euery one that doth not beleeue 2. Cor. 2.16 The loosing key is that part of the ministerie whereby remission of sinnes or absolution from sinnes in the name of Christ is pronounced vnto the beleeuers according to the word of God sometime publikely and sometime priuatly And so heauen is opened and the beleeuer is loosed and set at liberty by the preaching of the gospell from the bonds of sinne which hold vs in captiuity yea from death and euerlasting damnation and is declared to be an heire of life eternall a Luk. 1.77 Act. 2.38 Ioh. 20.23 The binding key is the other part of the Ministerie whereby the retention of their sinnes is denounced vnto the vnbeleeuers and disobedient and so heauen is shut vnto them they are bound that is they remaine captiued in the chaines of sinne and are adiudged vnto death and damnation vnlesse Repentance follow And those keyes are of such weight and efficacy that whatsoeuer is opened or remitted and likewse whatsoeuer is shut or retained in earth by the preaching of the Gospell is said also to be opened loosed and remitted and contrarily to be shut bound and reteyned in heauen according to that Luke 10.16 He that heareth you heareth me he that despiseth you despiseth me And Ioh. 7.18.36 Hee that beleeueth shall be saued he that beleeueth not is alreadie condemned So that indeed the key of the ministerie is but one but in vse double But he that beleeueth the gospell by the power of the holy ghost bringeth also faith which is as it were another key of the kingdome of heauen Whereon
or to be vsed and obserued in writing those lawes and humane traditions 1 That they be not repugnant to the analogy of faith or that they lead vs not from Christ or be superstitious of which sort for the most part the popish rites are neither must our consciences be intangled as though those lawes of order and decency be for that cause onely brought in as if they were parts of diuine worship 2 That they be not preferred before the heauenly doctrine which the Apostles receiuing from God haue deliuered nei●●●● must those lawes be eternall or immutable but as necessitie shall require mutable 3 That those things which are vnprofitable ridiculous foolish parasitical and operatiue should not be appointed for a graue honest and profitable order such as those which the Papacie doth commaund of Auricular confession the difference of meates daies and apparell vowed peregrination and the like 4 That the Church be not burdened with the multitude of those precepts as is done in poperie and the true and pure worship of God be oppressed as it was once done of the Pharisies b Mat. 23.4 and so the commaundements of God be made void in respect of men c Mat 15.3 Mar. 7.13 Act. 15.10 That they doe not degenerate into superstition or impietie that there be no merit ascribed to them or worship or necessitie that is they may not be accounted necessarie to saluation or a part of Gods worship and that of themselues by the work done as they speake which if it come to passe let them presently be reformed or altogether abolished by the example of Ezechias which brake in peeces the brasen Serpent d 2. Reg. 18 4 and lastly we must beware least through a pretence of indifferencie they offer poyson and hide a deadly hooke vnder a hony bayte VVho can ratifie or abolish those lawes In particuler Churches the Pastors by the sage iudgement of the Consistory and the authority of the Christian magistrate his consent being thereunto adioyned lastly the flocke being certified therof approouing the same who verily ought not rashly to forsake the opinion of their Pastors and superintendents being confirmed by the word of God sound reasons but in prouinciall Churches it is the office of the Synods being lawfully called in the Lord to constitute such kind of lawes VVhat is a lawfull Synode It is an assembly or meeting and councill either of certain places that is named A prouinciall Synod or else of the whole Church and so it is called Oecumenicall or vniuersall represented by certaine choise persons of her selfe for a certaine time as Pastors and gouernours being remoued as well from all popular gouernment as from smal gouernment and especially from Antichristian ●yrannie that they may expell the wolues and compose all controuersies which are raised in the Church out of the word of God prouided that it be alwaies their rule that they may maintaine pure doctrine and appoint such an outward cutaxie and goood order as seemeth most expedient for the whole Church a Act 15.2.6 c And of such Synods there is great profit 1. Because that which is sought of many is with greater facility obtained 2 Because errors heretiks patrons of errors are more easily repressed and condemned by common consent and iudgement of many By whom are Synods to be called and appoynted By the chiefe Magistrate if hee bee faithfull or at least if he tolerate the Christian faith who also eyther by himselfe or by others whom he hath made choyse of ought to be president of the Synode For it is the office of the Magistrate as the nurce of the Church to preserue the peace and quiet thereof but so that he doth submit himselfe to the word explaned by the mouth of the minister but if hee bee an infidel then it is the office of the Pastors to haue regard as much as in them lyeth that the Church of Christ be no whit damnified and mutually to stirre vp each other that by a common consent they may meete in the name of the Church without any prerogatiue of places to choose those who are knowne to excell in doctrine integritie of life and other gifts of the holy Ghost the Laitie being not excluded as it is manifest out of the Acts. Chap. 15.2 22.23.25 but especially that as Chrst did sit b Luk. 2.46 in the midst of the doctors so now he must be present and beare rule in the councel of the doctors Are all things which Synods decree to be accounted alwaies for true and vndoubted They are not as it is apparant by the second Nicene Councell which did determine against the word of God for the worshipping of Idols and the second Councell holden at Ephesus where the heresie of Eutiches preuailed and the Aphrican Councels where Cyprian was where it was established that those which were baptized by hereticks should be rebaptized for the Church on earth may erre yea being gathered together as it is euident out of Esay 56.10 Ier. 6.13 a Exod. 22.25 1 Reg. 22.6 22 Mar 12.29 Ioh. 11.2 47 2 Thess 2.4.11 the reason is because the Church on earth is not composed of the blessed Angesl but of men whose propertie it is to erre and to be deceiued for that which is said Psal 89.6 that the truth of God is in the congregation of his saints it is to be vnderstood either of the holy Angels liuing in heauen or els of the church where the pure preaching of the gospel soūdeth Is there any authoritie of the Synods There is but that which doth depend on the word of God namely which is of Christs promise Mat. 18 2● where two or three so more be gathered together in my name there am I in the the midst of them neither is it to be doubted but that much more some vniuersall company he doth gouern by his spirit b Act. 15 2● Cor. 5.4 Therfore the iudgments of Synods are not to be despised especially of those where Christ doth sit in the middest but withall obserue by what condition Christ is in the middest of a councell if it be gathered together in his name and the scripture bee in the most eminent place for then the definition of the councils concerning that opinion which is controuersed after lawfull examination and iust inquiry hath his waigh● which notwithstanding it selfe must be tried by the touchstone of the scripture according to that try all things keepe that which is good 1. Thess 5.21 Doth not the Apostle commād vs to obey rulers gouernors He. 13.17 Yes verily but both with an implicite condition if they be true rulers let not the word of God the volume of the law depart frō their mouths c Ios 1.7.8 if they sit in Moses chaire that is they teach the doctrine of Moses incorruptly d Mat. 23.2 in those things which are peculier to their ministery as in the word of God lawfull
administratiō of the Sacraments But yet the spirits are to be tried that is by a Metonymy those which say they are indued with the spirit of god whether they be of God 1. Ioh. 4.1 which cannot be done more certainly by any thing then by the scripture to which the Lord commandeth the triall of spirits to be conformed a Deut. 13.1 2.3 4 neither must we harken to the words of the false Prophets b Ier. 23 19 By what name were they wont to cal the definitions of Synods Canons which then especially haue authority are as lawes whosoeuer contemns violates them must vndergo the politicke punishmēt inflicted by the magistrate so soon as they are ratified cōfirmed by the chief magistrat but before they are not auailable by reason of politicall punishment although they be by reason of censure Do such constitutions bind the conscience before God No truly by themselues for that they are humane and mutable yet notwitstanding being once set downe to violate or contemne them with safe conscience no man can both in respect of scandalizing others as also by reason of contumacy but euerie one is tied faithfully to obserue them and that with a free conscience e 1 Cor. 10.28 29 but so as it may be done without scandall that is so that the weaker brethren be not offended and when vpon iust causes we be hindered sometimes it is lawfull to omit them our consciences being not offended VVhat is the ende of this power In generall the glorie of God and the edification of the Church to vs saith Paule 2. Cor. 10.8 13.10 is power giuen to edification not to destruction but the end of Synods is the assertion of the pure doctrine of God comprehended in his word against the heretickes and the constitution of Ecclesiastical gouernment in respect of the diuerse circumstances of time place and persons VVhat effect or vse haue they Order and Decencie d 1. Co. 4.40 Order whereby the presidents and publishers of the gospell haue a certaine rule in their actions and doe accustome their auditors to obedience and in a well gouerned estate of the Church peace and concord is kept Comelines whereby we may be incited by those helpes to pietie and that grauitie may appeare in the handling of pietie VVhat things are repugnant to this Doctrine 1 The errour both of those which ascribe to much and also of those which do attribute too little to the Church 2 The errour of the Nouatians or Catharists who deny pardon to those which are fallen by their confession or to those which are defiled with great offences 3 The Monarchie of the Papacie and tyranny which they haue arrogated to themselues in translating the kingdomes of the world 2 That tyrannicall voyce that the Pope of Rome ought to be iudged of no mortall man and that hee is aboue the councill 3 That vsurping and abusing the keyes and the power of remitting or retaining sinnes at his pleasure 4 That maioritie and supreme power which hee hath taken to himselfe by vertue of succession and of the Church when soeuer hee please in consigning the Canon of Scripture In interpreting the word of GOD and giuing the true sense of the Scripture in forging new Articles of our faith in making lawes and proposing traditions and establishing wicked decrees because as they say that the Bishoppe hath all lawes in the closet of his heart 5. All Ceremonies Popish rites and will-worship repugnant to the word of God 6 That errour that the Church is the rule of all things which are to bee beleeued when as on the contrarie the Scripture alone is the rule of faith 7. A wicked and superstitious opinion of necessity merit and worshippe in the obseruation of humane ceremonies 8. A foolish zeale of Moses law 9. That Sacriledge wherby they driue the laity from the reading of the word of God and doe prohibite Bibles to bee Printed in the vulgar tongue 10. Furthermore that Councils should be assembled and gouerned by the authoritie of the Pope and that such Councils cannot erre 11. That the Church ought to supply the defect of the word written by written traditions which is to attribute more authority and power to the Church then is meete 12 That the Church is eminent in generall Councils and that the trueth remaineth no where but amongst their Pastors 13. That the power of interpreting the Scriptures is in the Councils and that no man may appeale from them 14. That the approbation of the Scripture to be either Canonicall or Apocryphall dependeth on the iudgement of the Church 15. The contempt of constitutions simply for order and decency appointed in the Church 16. The errour of those who in Ecclesiasticall controuersies resting on their owne priuate iudgements opinions do disclaime Synods and all definitions deliuered by Synods The foure and fortieth common place Of the Gouernment and Iurisdiction of the Church where also of fasting What is the third part of Ecclesiasticall power IVdiciarie or Iurisdiction Ecclesiastical altogither to be distinguished from ciuill and is commonly called power and it is another part or kinde of the power of the keyes distinguished from the former for that the first whereof Mat. 16.19 and Ioh. 20.23 which is the office of teaching or of preaching the Gospell committed to the Pastors doth properly appertaine vnto them but this doth belong to the moral discipline of the Church and repressing of offencs commended to the Church which the Graecians cal 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is discipline correction institution wherof Christ speaketh Mat. 18.17.18 If a brother do not heare the Church let him be as a Heathen or Publican vnto thee verily I say vnto you whatsoeuer you shall binde on earth shall be bound in heauen and whatsoeuer you shall loose shall be loosed for the Church doth bind whom she doth excommunicate and she doth loose when she againe receiues men into her society VVhat is Ecclesiasticall gouer●ment It is an Ecclesiasticall Paedagogie instituted by the authority of the word of God whereby men being receiued into the familie of Christ they are guided to godlinesse and compelled not to commit any thing vnworthy the Christian profession but those which do offend and are inordinate are reproued chidden and corrected that they may returne into the right way and that euery one may do their dutie according to the direction of the Gospell How manifold is Ecclesiasticall gouernment Twofold Common vnto which all citizens of the Church ought equally to be subiect and proper which is peculier to the Clergie and doth solely appertain to the ministers of the Church to reteine them in their dutie and the common againe is twofold ordinary extraordinary now that is ordinary which alwaies hath the word of God and Apostolicall tradition for his rule and from which it doth neuer decline and is alwaies obserued in the Church How many parts bee there of ordinary
vp in them through faith Or else it is a visible signe of inuisible and sauing grace of God instituted of God to seale and confirme that grace in vs. Or a Sacrament is a testimony of the grace of God toward vs in Christ confirmed by a visible signe with the mutuall testification of our faith and religion towards him b Gen. 17 7 10.11 1 Cor. 11 23 Who is author of the Sacrament God alone for as it belongs to God alone 1. To promise and to giue grace 2. To make a couenant with the Church 3. To bestow the gift of righteousnesse So also it belongs to him alone to institute a signe of grace or of the couenant and remission of sinnes 1. Cor. 11.23 I haue receiued of the Lord that which I haue also deliuered vnto you Therefore may wee not receiue any other Sacrament into the Church then those which God hath ordained to that vse neither yet is the forme or manner of the institution any manner of waies to bee violated For Thomas saith well The ordaining of Sacraments is a note of the excellencie power and maiestie of God Why did God adde the Sacraments to the word 1. To the intent that they might be visible Sermons of his promises applyed to our capacitie who be stil carnal wherupon Augustine saith that the Sacrament is a visible or a sensible word 2. That they might be signes whereby men yea such as bee most ignorant and rude might bee stirred vp to perswade themselues that God doth not mock men when hee promiseth his grace and eternall life vnto them and that by such signes they might bee led by the hand vnto the thing promised as it were present For if thou hadst beene spirituall saith Chrysostome God would haue propounded his spirituall gifts spiritually vnto thee But now seeing the soule is vnited to the bodie hee propoundeth his spirituall gifts vnto thee by those which are corporall 3. That he might vnderprop and confirme our faith in his promises none otherwise then ciuill contracts being subscribed by the Secretarie the Princes seale is wont to bee added that so there may be a strong euidence or authenticall instrument 4. That by signes of his owne institution hee might call vs back to worship him might hold vs therin and might put a difference betweene vs and other sects Whereby it comes to passe that the first man yea being pure and free from sinne hereupon earth had neede of Sacraments because hee was made earthly and naturall a 1. Cor. 15.45 But after that we shall bee in heauen heauenly and spirituall and haue once obtained the promises wee shall then haue no more neede of them In what predicament is a Sacrament To wit of Relation so farre forth as it is considered as a signe or a thing signifying in respect of the end or the scope whereunto it is ordained for a signe hath relation to the thing signified Therefore a Sacrament 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is in the predicament of Relatiues that is of those things which haue relation to others For Relatiues are such whose essence is nothing else but this by some meanes to haue relation or reference to another thing And it is also in the predicament of Action so farre as being a visible action it is commanded to be done with a certaine ceremonie For the water simply taken by it selfe is not the baptitisme but the sprinkling of the water in a conuenient manner together with the institution of Christ Neither are the bread and wine simply by themselues vnderstood the Supper of the Lord but the bread together with the breaking distributing taking and eating of bread and drinking of wine as it is ordained by Christ for the remembrance of him What is the genus of a Sacrament A signe because it signifieth something For euery Sacrament is a signe but not euery signe is a Sacrament but a signe in lawfull vse for that golden rule is infallible nothing hath the nature of a Sacrament out of the vse instituted of God Now a signe as Augustine defineth it ●ib 2 doc● Christ is a thing that besides that forme which it offereth vnto the senses maketh some other thing thereby to come into the minde So Gen. 17.11 Circumcision is called the signe of the couenant And of signes some bee naturall which signifie of their owne nature as the dawning of the day is a signe of the sunne approaching some be at the will of the Institutor as the signes of families And these are such as either haue some Analogie and likenesse with the thing they do signifie of which sort be the sacraments Whereupon Augustine saith If the sacraments should not haue a certaine likenesse with those things wherof they bee sacraments they should not bee sacraments or else such as haue no similitude with the thing signified but doe altogether depend of the institution In which sense words are signes of things and the ringing of the bell a signe there shall be a Sermon How many sorts of signes be propounded to be considered in the scriptures Three sorts some of Doctrine or of the word as the extraordinarie and vniuersall worke of God or miracles which are seene with the eyes where at the mindes of men doe wonder which giue testimonie of the infallible trueth of the word vnto the glorie of God As in the old Testament Abrahams smoking furnace and burning firebrand a Gen 15.17 the bush burning and not consumed b Exod. 3.2 Epist 23.40 Bonif Moses his rod c Exod. 4.2 3 the pillar of a cloud in the day and that pillar of fire by night d Cap. 13.20 the drying vp of the red sea e Ca. 14.14 water flowing out of the rocke f Cap. 17 6 the standing still of the Sunne g Iosu 10.13 the signe of the Prophet Ionah In the new the healing of the sick raising vp of the dead casting out of Diuels h Mark 16 17 18 c. Some of Anger and those either threatning with some fell iudgements to hang ouer mens heads for their sinnes as namely wonders in heauen comets tempests earthquakes the signe of the sonne of man i Mat 24 30 or else punishing both temporal as thunders lightnings famine pestilence wars euill beasts as also spirituall to wit heresies corrupting of Doctrine idolatry schismes which the Lord sendeth that men being admonished and corrected by these might repent and there be signes which God shall send before the day of Christs comming k Mat 24 4 5 Others be the signes of grace which are added to the promises of God and doe testifie of the grace of God toward vs. Wherfore they are not signes simply which serue to shadow out signify only the things with God promiseth but seales pledges because they seale vp vnto the beleeuers the things promised l Gen. 9.22 37.9.10 Of how many essentiall parts doth a Sacrament consist Of
of vs and of the things signified the coniunction is not in trueth essentiall and personall but mysticall and yet in its kinde reall to wit spirituall by the power of the holy Ghost alone who bringeth to passe that Iesus Christ who now as he is man hath his being in heauen and yet is no lesse truely giuen to vs which are in earth then the signes themselues namely so farre forth as our faith beholding him in the Sacraments doth clime vp into the heauens that we may more and more truely imbrace him and he may liue and abide in vs. For the holy Ghost knoweth to ioyne most nearely together by the bond of faith those things which if you respect the distance of the place are farthest asunder which is done after a heauenly and spirituall manner and not naturally not by the ioyning touching of substances after which manner the beleeuers are most nerely ioyned together one with another as also the husband and the wife are knit together by the bond of mariage although they bee farre asunder in regard of the distance of places Whether are both the things and the signes offered vnto vs of God ioyntly together Yes ioyntly together in respect of God that promiseth truely and without all deceipt but yet distinctly notwithstanding so as oftentimes hee that taketh the signes receiueth nothing lesse then the thing it selfe Whereupon Augustine saith vpon Leuit 7 quest 84 It nothing auaileth Simon Magus to haue the visible Baptisme who wanted the inuisible sanctification What is the manner of receiuing the signes and the things signified The manner of receiuing the signes is naturall or bodilie and the signes are receiued both of the beleeuers and also of the vnbeleeuers after a naturall manner although with contrarie successe But the things themselues signified are communicated in respect of God that giueth them by the holy Ghost and in respect of vs by faith whereby alone Christ with all his benefits is apprehended of vs a Eph. 3.17 For a thing intelligible spiritually propounded cannot bee perceiued vnlesse it be after a spirituall manner that spirituall things might answer to spirituall things corporall and visible to corporall and visible b 1 Cor. 1.13 In this Treatise what doe these things signifie Really Substantially corporally Sacramentally Spiritually Really signifies properly that the verie thing it selfe is truely receiued to which these words substantially and essentially are equiualent So the beleeuers in the right vse of the Sacrament are said to receiue Christ really substantially or essentially also to take the holy elements really substantially essentially But corporally spiritually signifie the manner of receiuing only the signes are receiued corporally but Christ spiritually And to receiue Sacramentally is to receiue the signes of the bodie and bloud of Christ Whether do all they inioy the matter of the Sacraments which vse visible signes No but only the beleeuers vnto whom the promise of grace doth belong and for whose sake the same is ratified by certaine seales For what part or fellowshippe hath the beleeuer with the vnbeleeuer 2. Cor. 6.15 Is it possible for a man to be guiltie by meanes of the thing signified who is not partaker of the same Yes hee may for the abusing of the signes and for the contumelious reproach against the thing signified none otherwise then hee which despiseth the seruants of Christ is guiltie of the contempt of our Lord Iesus Christ and of his Father also a Luk. 10.16 Is faith of the Substance and essence of the Sacraments No because faith maketh not a Sacrament to bee a Sacrament but the institution of God Indeede faith is necessary that wee may receiue the matter of the Sacrament for by faith Christ dwelleth in our hearts b Eph. 3.17 But whether a man beleeue or whether hee beleeue not if the Sacrament be rightly administred hee receiueth the true Sacrament namely in respect of God Yet in respect of the Communicant if a man beleeue not he receiueth the bare signe because without faith neither the word nor the Sacrament can do vs any good Whence is the consecration or the sanctification and blessing of the Sacraments Not by making the signe of the Crosse the repeating and secret murmuring of any words as Iuglers Coniurers do repeat their charmes in conceiued words namely for example of Iupiter that sends the thunder or of bringing the Moone out of Heauen to wit by the force and vertue of letters and syllables if they be repeated and vttered after a certaine manner But from the holy and good will choise institution or ordinance blessing consecration worke commaundement the ratification of the word and the promise of God himselfe who for the good of men hath made choyce of water bread and wine and hath instituted by his ordinance set thē apart for some special purpose and because he hath shewed that it is his pleasure to haue them for Sacraments and how he will haue them celebrated Further by the holy vse which is performed by prayers by the commemoration of the benefits and promises of God and giuing of thanks VVhen is such consecration made First indeede the Lord himselfe made it once and together by himselfe in that first institution namely in that last Supper and this being once made doth consecrate sanctifie the Sacraments to the Church vntill the end of the world as that word once spoken Increase and multiply is perpetually effectuall Gen. 1.28 But now he doth repeat the same by prayers and the word whereby the whole Institution and vse of the externall things is clearely vnfolded by men and those not any whomsoeuer but such as bee lawfully called that is to say by his Pastors and Ministers For otherwise it is no Sacrament but a prophanation of the Sacrament VVhether is there any change of the signes in the Sacraments Truely there is not in the nature or substance the naturall qualitie or quantitie of the Elements the change I say is not of the essence nature as saith Theodoret But only in respect of the end office condition vse for which they bee propounded in the Church namely because they begin to signifie to vs in trueth things altogether heauenly and diuine and that not of their owne nature but by the appointment of the sonne of God As namely for example sake when water btead wine are remoued from the common vse and by the commaundement of God are made the signes of the body and bloud of the Lord which thing certainly they haue not by nature For then euery water should bee the signe of Christs bloud but by the institution of the Lord himself Also the name of the signes are indeed changed but not the matter namely to the intent that we might haue a greater regard of the things signified then of the signes and that the minde might mount vp from the Elements vnto Christ Therefore Theodoret in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith that
Christ honoured the visible signes by caling them his bodie and bloud not changing the nature of the signes but adding grace to the nature of the signes Now that grace added to nature is that those Elements are made Sacramēts that is means Instruments of the holy Ghost to confirme preserue increase the Communion of Christ Is this change perpetuall No because it hath respect vnto the vse only and that publick too in the Church Wherefore out of the verie action it selfe of the mysteries or the administration of the Sacraments there is no place for it For nothing hath the nature of a Sacrament out of the vse which Christ instituted How are the Sacramental phrases or speaches to be expoūded vnderstood All the places of Scripture are not to be vnderstood according to the letter but according to the sense hauing regard to the analogy of faith the circūstances of those places But specially the places which cōcerne the Sacramēts cannot be taken or vnderstood according to the litter by reason of the nature of the sacramēts wher in we do not cōsider one thing simply but twain to wit the visible and external signes also the heauenly and visible things signified by them How many kinds of Sacraments be there In respect of the estate of men there be two Some before the fall in the state of integrity and innocency of our first parents others ordained of God after the fal And before the fal there were two Sacraments one commanded the other forbidden The former of immortality which of the end is called the the tree of life not that it could giue life wherwith Adam was now already indewed but Sacramentally because it was a pledge signe remembrance of immortality to thē which might eate of the fruit therof Another of tryall which by a Metonimie was named the the tree of knowledge or of experience of good euill of the euent or issue to wit because man after the eating therof should know haue experience both what great good he had lost into how great misery he had plunged himself From the tasting wherof he shold haue abstained to declare vnto God his due obedience a Gen. 2.9 17 et 3.3.22 not that god would haue man to wander vp downe like a beast without iudgement choyce of things for he had iudgement giuen him wherby he might discerne betwene vertues vices but that hee might not couet to know more then was meet for him least trusting to his own sense casting off gods yoak he should make himselfe arbitrator iudge of good euil How manifold be the Sacraments after the fall Some of the old Testament some of the New Those shadowed out the Messias to be exhibited these do testifie that he is exhibited Again of those wherin was shadowed out the Messias to bee exhibited some were for a time accidental extrordinary which god vsed only once or for a certain time some were set ordinary which ought to be in ordinary vse vntil the time of reformation a Heb. 9.18 for those things are said to be reformed which are truely directed to their proper end wheras these tended to the same but yet thwartly not directly Temporary were the floud b Gen. 7.6 The passing thorow the red sea c Exod. 14.22 the staying vnder the cloud d Exod. 13 22 which three were as it were a certain baptisme of the old Testament Manna sent from heauen e Exod. 16.14.15 Ioh. 6.31 water out of the rock f Exod. 17 6 were as the Eucharist spiritual drink 1 Cor. 10 1.2 3. I would not haue you ignorant that al our fathers were vnder the cloud al passed through the sea al were baptised in the cloud in the sea did all eate the same spirituall meate drink the same spiritual drink From the floud the deliuerance or escaping frō the waters which befel Noe his family was a signe to him of the spiritual deliuerāce escaping of the church out of the gulf of sin death to a new life wherof at this day baptism is a type to vs and therefore is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an exmplar or picture correspondēt to that deliuerāce which came to passe in the floud g 1 Pet. 3 21 There are therefore two types but the former is the figure of shadow of the latterh. And the latter the patterne of the former or the figure answering to it In which respect the Sacraments of the new Couenant may be called the patterns answering to them of the old So the passing through the red Sea and that staying vnder the Cloud were shadowes and signes of washing from sins and a shadowing forth of the heauenly power of the spirit But in respect of vs they were types of our Baptisme and in like manner our baptisme a patterne of them Wherupon the Apostle 1. Cor. 10 2. saith the Fathers were Baptized in the Cloud and in the sea vnto Moses that is not into the name of Moses but Moses being their guid 2. So the M●nna from heauen and water flowing out of the rock were in steede of the Supper and signified the spirituall food of Christ and the meate drink to nourish our soules spiritually vnto eternall life and to the beleeuers did truely offer it by faith to bee receiued spiritually Whereupon the Apostle 1. Cor. 10.3 calleth Manna considering it as a Sacrament spirituall meate that is saith Augustin meate signifying some spirituall thing to wit Christ in his time to be exhibited In Psal 77 but euen then present and effectuall to the godly who did by faith lay hold on him who was to come And verse 4. in the same respect he calleth the stone or rock wherout the Riuer which followed the Israelits or went with them the spirituall drinke Sacramentally or by a Metonymie Christ For they dranke saith he of that spirituall rock that followed that rock was Christ Now our Supper is the patterne or resemblance of that Manna and that water What were the set and ordinarie Sacraments 1. One generall perpetuall and common to all men and for their sake and profit to the brute beaste and so to euery liuing soule which also is called Naturall because God would haue it extant in a naturall thing when by his word he marked out and consecrated the Raine-bowe that is the bowe in the Heauens which riseth of naturall causes for his Sovereignty which hee hath ouer all creatures and ordeined it to Noe and all his posteritie for a signe monument and pawne that hee hath testified that he will not hereafter destroy the earth with a floud Gen. 9.9 10.13 I will put my bowe in the Clowde and it shall bee for a signe of the Couenant betweene mee and the earth Note that such a bowe was fashioned which was not before the Floud but because it was made knowne by
the iourney in haste and of not departing out of the house till morning was singuler and pertained onely to that one night when the people departed out of Aegypt wherein the Israelites were to remooue with all speed out of Aegypt that is it belonged to that Passeover onely which they did celebrate in Aegypt Therefore in the institution of the yearely Passeouer these cer●monies are not repeated b Exod. 12 14. Numb 9.2 c. And therefore it is cleare that Christ when he sate at the celebration of the Passeouer and after the eating of it went into the garden as the Euangelistes report did not against the law Also it is to be marked that after they possessed the land of Canaan the Lambe was not killed in their houses as it was in Aegypt but before the Arke in the Temple by the Leuites c 1 Cor. 35.36 and in their priuate houses it was eaten by their companie with keeping a feast To what purpose and vse are all these things which haue beene spoken of the Paschall Lambe 1 That they might be a remembrance of the thing past namely the blessing of God whereby the Israelites were saued that night in Aegypt when the Angell of God slew all the first borne of Aegypt passing ouer the houses of the Israelites which were besprinkled with the bloud of the Lambe that was slaine 2 That they might be patternes and types of a thing to come namely that Christ should be sent in the time appointed which Paule cals the fulnesse of time God required a perfect Lambe without spot seuered from the rest of the flocke that they might vnderstand that to appease the anger of God there was required a more excellent prise then could possibly be founde in all mankinde And that he might single out the innocent Lambe separate from sinners obedient to the father perfectly fulfilling the law and indued with heauenly puritie and therefore conceiued by the holy Ghost in the wombe of the Virgin that he might take away the sinnes of other men 2 A Male to shew that that Lambe should bee mightie and indued with great power in regard of his person to take away the sinnes of the world and to destroy the kingdome of sinne and to deliuer vs from the bondage of sinne and Sathan c. As it is said Esay 53.10 He shall deuide the spoyles of the mightie And Psal 63.13 He shall ascend vp on high and leade captiuitiue captiue and shall receiue gifts for men Yet but a yeare old that is tender weake and knowing infirmitie a Esa 53.3 In regard of his humane nature because it was meete hee should bee taken from the companie of his brethren and be like vnto vs in all things excepting sinne Heb. 4.15 3 He would haue it kept in their custodie foure daies to wit from the tenth day of the first moneth vntill the Euening of the fourteenth day to shew that Christ should not be deliuered vnto death presently assoone as he was borne but that he should discharge the publicke ministerie of the Gospell for a certaine time time appointed by the father 4 He would haue it slaine betweene the Euenings to declare that this Lambe should be slaine at length in the Euening of daies that is in the fulnesse of times b Gal. 4.8 or in the last time for all the mul-titude of mankinde that is for the whole bodie of them which are written in the booke of life 5 Hee would haue postes besprinkeled with the bloud therof to signify that the hearts of the beleeuers are sprinkeled washed marked purged and sanctifyed by the bloud of this Lambe alone thorow faith relying vpon his merit This sprinkling being made with a bunch of Hyssope that is by the purging power of the Spirit whereof that is spoken Psal 51.9 thou shalt sprinckle me with Hyssope I shal be cleane And 1. Pet. 1 2. thorow sanctification of the spirit vnto obedience and spinckling of the bloud of Iesus and vers 18. ye are redeemed with the precious bloud of Christ as of a Lambe without spot Moreouer by the bloud of Christ sprinckled vpon the doores of our heart is signified that the destroyer is turned away we are defended from the anger of God and by the bloud of his Crosse all things whether in the earth or in the heauens are reconciled Col. 1.20 6 By the rest of the Ceremonies he shewed that this Lambe must be eaten by faith and conceaued in the minde whole with the head feet and intrals and not rent in sunder or deuided into gobbets and peeces As he saith My flesh is meat indeed he that eateth my flesh and drinketh my bloud hath eternall life Iohn 6.55.56 7 That it must be eaten in common with their neighbours that is the Gentiles that is to say the Gentiles must bee called by the voyce of the Gospell vnto the communion of Christ 8 That it must be eaten not rawe neither sodd in water but as it were rosted in the fire of Gods iudgement and tried in the heat of the Crosse afflictions both to the casting of of hypocrisie the scandall of the Crosse carnall securitie as also the opinions of men concerning the matters of God and that which cannot be knowne must by the fyre of fayth be consumed 9 That it must be eat 1. With the vnleauened bread of sinceritie and truth as it is said 1. Cor. 5.8 Purge out the old leauen that ye may be a new lump for Christ our Passeouer is sacrificed for vs. Therefore let vs keepe the feast with vnleauened bread of synceritie and truth namely without leauen not of the kingdome of heauen of which it is spoken Mat. 13.33 the kingdome of heauen is like leauen but of the olde leauen of malitiousnesse and naughtinesse the subtiltie of Herod of an euill conscience of the opinions of the Pharisees of false doctrine whereof the Lord speaketh Take heede of the leauen of the Pharisees and of Herode Mat. 16.6.11.12 Lastly without the leauen of wicked life wherof the Apostle mingle not your selues with fornicatours c. For a little leauen leaueneth the whole lumpe 1. Cor. 5.6 Gal. 5.9 2. With bitter hearts that is with the renouncing of the bitter slauery of sinne and the rest of our enemies wherewith we haue been oppressed and with bitternesse and compunction of heart or with earnest repentance and sorrow mourning for our sinnes with mortifying of the reliques of the old Adam and with a feruent appetite and desire of the grace of Christ 10 Hee would teach them that did eate the Lambe that they must be atttried after the habit and manner of trauellers who hauing their loynes girded with the belt or girdle of veritie as the Apostle cals it Ephe. 6.14 may be readie to enter into the way of Gods commaundements and who may with the girdle of faith and righteousnesse restraine and suppresse the wisedome of the flesh lust wicked concupiscences striuing against
Christs bloud doth take away the thirst of the soule 3 As wine doth make glad the heart of man b Psal 10.15 so also the promises concerning Christ do make glad the soule 4 As wine doth heat the bodie and maketh vs more cheerefull and readie to doe our businesse so the bloud of Christ receiued by faith doth quicken the soule vnto all good motions and so the vertue of the spirit doth stirre vs vp and maketh vs more nimble vnto all good wokes 5 As wine driueth away coldnes so the bloud of Christ driueth away the coldnes of loue and charitie 6 As win● maketh vs more secure and more bold so the bloud of Christ receiued by Faith doth make vs secure and quiet before God and more constant in confession that there may be nothing at all which we ought to feare 7 As wine maketh vs wise so the bloud of Christ receiued by faith maketh vs wise in the confession and commemoration of Christs benefits 8 As wine driueth away the palenesse of the face maketh the face of man to shine as with oyle c Psal 104 15 so the bloud of Christ doth turne the colour of the soule being pale with feare of death into the verie colour of the Rose that is to say it appeaseth our consciences it maketh vs faire in the presence of God that wee may appeare before him with a fayre and ruddie face that is to say iust and accepted What if bread such as wee haue and wine be wanting in some countries with what signes is the supper to be administred With those earthly nourishments and corporall meats which all doe vse in that countrey in stead of bread and wine meate and drinke for this doth agree with the minde of Christ From hence it was granted to the Nouergian Priests as Volaterranus witnesseth necessitie requiring it that they did conscrate the mysticall cup without wine with that which they had in common seeing that wine caried into the countrey is quickly corrupted by the great force of the cold VVhat need is there now of those two signes that is to say of bread and wine seeing that the whole humanitie of Christ consisting of his parts of bodie and bloud doth liue glorious in the heauens and by reason of concomitancie that is to say a naturall ioyning together of the liuing bodie and the bloud the whole may be signified and giuen in seuerall kindes and where the quicke bodie is present there also must the bloud and soule be present and by reason of the hypostaticall vnion the diuinitie also may be there and so there may be no controuersie moued concerning those things that be equiualent but one may suffice in steed of two From whence is that Rime of Thomas Caro cibus sanguis potus manet tamen Christus totus sub vtraque specie that is to say The flesh is meate the bloud is drinke yet Christ remayneth whole vnder both kindes 1 Because the same reason of concomitancie doth belong to the Priests which notwithstanding celebrating the Masse will alwaies vse the whole sacrament 2 Because Christ Iesus who is the wisedome of the Eternall Father commending to his Church nothing superfluous ordayned those two signes and of set purpose commended the vse of the cup to all saying Drinke ye all of it to signifie the drinking of one and the same bloud shed for many common to all the faithfull without difference of Nation of sexe of estate But for mens conceipts the commaundement of God is not to bee violated who called distinctly and exactly bread the bodie not the bloud and wine the bloud not the bodie Neyther can the Church change the matter or forme 3 Because neyther for the connexion of parts in the thing signifyed is a diuulsion or diuision of the parts to be made in outward rite or ceremonie 4 Because there is not made an inclusion of Christ into the Sacramentall signes For Christ is present in the Supper not for the bread but for the man 5 Because that bodie and that bloud of Christ is not in this action represented vnto vs sacramentally as now the whole indiuided humanitie of Christ doth liue glorious but so farre forth as they were offered vnto death for vs vpon the crosse the bloud being shed out of the bodie for the words added to the signes doe plainly crie that the bodie and bloud of Christ are offered and exhibited to vs in the Supper as things separated in the sacrifice of the Crosse From whence we must conclude seeing that the concomitancie of the bodie and bloud cannot agree to the death of Christ for to be in the bodie and to be shed out of the bodie are things contrarie that that concomitancie is directly contrarie to the institution of Christ Neyther is the hypostaticall vnion of God and man therefore broken which is not broken in death although the soule and bloud be separated from the bodie Rightly therefore Beda The bread is referred to the bodie of Christ mystically the wine to the bloud And the ancient fathers spake no otherwise of this mysterie then if daily in the administration of the Lords Supper he should be slaine die and be sacrificed for vs This is in the cup saith Chrysostome which flowed out of his side and we are partakers of it But what If a man at this day be conuersant in those places where one part of the Supper is taken from the laity shall he altogether abstaine from the vse of the communion It were farre better for him to abstaine especially if hee haue learned out of the former doctrine of the Gospell that that corruption doth fight with the word of God For it is a great sin to consent to the least pollution of Christs institution against conscience Rightly therefore Ambrose He is vnworthie of the Lord which doth celebrate a mysterie otherwise then it was deliuered of him for he cannot be deuout which doth presume otherwise then it was giuen from that author What did Christ when he had taken the bread Hee instituted signes of a second kind that is the outward actions of them which do administer the Supper or rites of dispensation of the Lords Supper wherein he went before all ministers by his example What rites are they Hee gaue thanks to the father to whom he gaue all the thanks of our redemption as it were the chiefe cause thereof and in the vse as well of the Supper as of daily meat and of other things he taught vs to doe the same a Iohn 6.11 1 Tim. 4.5 by his example Moreouer also with blessing and thāksgiuing for the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is blessed and gaue thanks are vsed one with another Mat. 26.26.27 concerning the Lords Supper Mark. 14.22.23 not with the signe of the Crosse as the popish Cleargie ignorantly doe thinke as though he vsed coniuring but with blessing that is with prayers vnto God he prepared he appointed and he sanctified the bread
senses all which truely together cannot bee deceiued vnlesse they bee withholden as in the two Disciples which did thinke the Lord to be some stranger and in Marie Magdalene which supposed that he had beene the gardiner Luk. 24.16 Ioh. 20.15 Whether vnlesse the bodie of Christ be determined to be euery where by this is it separated and pulled asunder from the Diuine nature which is eueriewhere and to which it selfe is personally vnited or hath the body of the Lord obtained that by the vnion that it should be wheresoeuer the word is In no wise because of those things which are equally vnited so as one doth not stretch further then another one cannot be in any place where the other is not but if the one doe stretch further then wheresoeuer the lesse is there also is the greater but not contrariwise as wee may see in a precious stone and in a ring Because therefore the diuinitie of Christ doth exceede the humanitie wheresoeuer the humanity is there is the diuinitie with it not on the contrarie Neither is the personall vnion a making euen of the humane nature with the Diuine or an effusion of the properties of the Diuine nature into the humane that the humane nature may haue the same properties which the diuine hath but it is such an vnion wherby the humane nature doth subsist in the person of the word so as it may be as it were a part therof neither may it subsist by it selfe or without the word But it doth not follow Epist 57. ad Dard. saith Augustine that that which is in God is euery where as God is Moreouer seing that the deitie is euery where whole not by parts not as in a place it cannot be that the humane nature which it assumed can be said to be separated any where from it although it be contained onely in it owne place so as the inuiolable truth thereof doth beare But also the bodie of the sunne and the light thereof haue betweene themselues a naturall and extreme coniunction yet notwithstāding to what places soeuer the light doth extend it self the body doth not come to them really So also the eye the sight are verie neerly ioyned together between themselues yet the sight goeth to many things to which the eye doth not extend it selfe Finally rightly said those ancient fathers in the general council of Chalcedon that the difference of natures in Christ is not taken away for the vnion but rather that the propertie is kept of both natures concurring into one person or one hypostasis But whether did that which Christ said Ioh. 3.13 No man ascendeth vp to heauen but the sonne of man which is in heauen make the humane nature of Christ while it was in earth to haue beene also at the same time in heauen No for the Sonne of man in this place signifieth the whole person of Christ which also is the Sonne of God but the humane nature doth signifie onely one part of that person which was assumed in time of the virgin Therefore that which is spoken of this person which is not man onely but also God is amisse said to be spoken of the humane nature also For by this it should be gathered that the humane nature was before Abraham before it was conceiued in the wombe of the virgine But it is certaine that the sonne of God when hee did speake in earth was in heauen in the same manner wherein hee descended from heauen For Christ doth speake of one and the same subiect that is of the sonne of man that he descended from heauen concerning whom he said that he is in heauen But the son of mā is said to haue descēded not because his flesh fell downe from heauen but because the diuine nature is from heauen and tooke vnto it humane flesh Therefore the sonne of man when hee was vpon earth is so said to haue beene in heauen not because the humane nature but because the diuine nature of this sonne which alwaies filleth heauen and earth was in heauen namely by the Trope Synecdoche wherby both the whole is plainely vnderstood Booke 6. cap. and a part is named of the whole saith Cassian It is not vniust to subiect the nature of Christs glorious body which is called spirituall to the lawes of common nature In no wise because the glorie abolished not the trueth of the bodie nor changed it into a spirit but altogether made it subiect to the spirit a Luk. 24.36 Acts. 1.9 10 11. 7.55 56 Aug. Whether doe the Orthodoxall Fathers when they write that the bread which the Lord did reach to the Disciples not changed in forme but in nature by the almightie power of his word was made flesh Cyprian Serm. de caena domini In prologe Psal 33 That Christ bare himselfe in his hands Augustine That the bodie of the Lord doth enter into our mouth That the tongue is made bloudie with the bloud of Christ and that Christ himselfe is seene touched broken and that teeth are fastned to his flesh whither doe they I say b Chrysost Hom. 83. vpon Math. 45. vpō Iohn hom 24 vpō 1. Cor. speake properly and without trope No seeing that the senses themselues and experience do witnesse the contrarie and these things cannot bee spoken properly without great and Capernaiticall blasphemy Therefore those speaches of the fathers are figuratiue whereby the name and effects of bodie and bloud are giuen to bread and wine and in like manner those things which are done in the signes are attributed to the bodie and bloud of Christ but yet although somewhat hardly and by an hyperbole to commend the worthinesse of the mysterie they doe shewe in these most expresse figuratiue and Metonimicall phrases how certaine and effectuall the mystery is of our communion with Christ or our spirituall eating of Christ namely of such sort that we may bee flesh of his flesh and bone of his bones that is that being truely made one with him wee may enioy all his goods b Ephe. 5.30 In epist vpon Ioh tractat 1 serm de Cr●mate Epist 102 ad Euodium Otherwise saith Augustin We cannot with the hand handle Christ fitting in heauē but we can touch Christ by faith And Tract vpon Io. 50. The bodie of Christ ascended into heauen some body may aske How shal I hold him being absent How shal I send my hands into heauen that I may hold him sitting there Send thy faith thou hast hold on him And vpon Ps 73. he writeth that he did beare himself in his owne hands after a sort namely because he did beare in his own hands the Sacramēt of his bodie And Cyprian saith that Sacraments haue the names of those things which they doe signifie And the same Augustin Neither let it moue thee saith he that somtime the thing which doth signifie doth take the name of that thing which it signifieth for so the rock is called
fulnesse of Christ Ephes 5.30 and 4.13 Of which place Zanchius in his comment vpon it discourseth most learnedly What therefore is that which is conioyned vnto vs Christ according to himselfe and according to his effect and grace that is Christ himselfe whole but yet spiritually and to bee considered in minde together with all his merits How is this vnion made whether by a reall actuall and corporall inuisible falling downe of Christs flesh into vs and by a naturall touching with ours or by a connexion contiguitie locall indistance orall perception or by an essentiall commixtion of the flesh of Christ and ours or by an ingresse of his bodie and soule or by a corporall coniunction By none of these For the veritie of the flesh of Christ and his ascension into heauen doe not suffer this Besides also out of so many substances of diuers bodies there should grow a most monstrous bodie but by a copulation or connexion altogether spirituall and supernaturall yet reall and true altogether after a diuine and heauenly manner For if the things which are vnited be respected it is an Essentiall vnion If the truth of the vnion it is reall But if the manner whereby this vnion is made it is spirituall That there is such an vnion it is truly manifest vnto vs out of the both simple sacramentall word of God but for the forme which may containe the exact definition thereof the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the very being of it how it is which some doe importunately require of vs the Apostle by the best right calleth a great mysterie Ephes 5.32 They shall be two in one flesh The reason whereof is such that we cannot in our mindes comprehend it For it is spoken Contradictorily that any thing is accuratelie declared eyther that the forme therof or formal cause is accuratly knowne and is secret For now wee see through a glasse darkely but then shall wee see face to face Now I know in part but then shall I know euen as I am knowne And wee walke by faith not by sight 1. Cor. 13.9.12 and 2. Cor. 5.7 And it is enough in this mysterie to know the efficient cause with the finall and adiuuant causes For also in actions wee then know chiefely when wee see the beginning of the motion saith the chiefe of the Phylosophers booke third that is when wee haue knowen the efficient cause Which is the proper cause or the meanes and the Energeticall that is efficient cause of this our communion with Christ The operation efficacie and working of the holy Ghost doth cause that a man receiueth Christ together with his merits For as the sinewes comming from the braine are scattered into the integrall parts of the liuing bodie and doe ioyne the middle low panch armes hands feet both to the head also to the members by a conueniēt situation function of euery part remaining safe So one the same spirit of Christ comprehending vs a Phi. 3.12 doth so make vs partakers of him that cleauing fast both to Christ the head to his members more straightly and more strongly then the members of the naturall bodie to the bodie wee may neuer be separated from him and from them as Paule teacheth 1. Cor. 12.12 As the bodie is one and hath many members and all the member of the bodie which is one though they be many yet are but one bodie euen so is Christ For so collectiuely by a word taken from the head he calleth both Christ who is the head and the mysticall bodie of that head which is the Church Whereby it commeth to passe from that great bounty of our Sauiour that Christ also himselfe becommeth so neerely ours and we likewise his that before the fathers iudgement seat Christ and the Church not by a hypostaticall ioyning of substances but by a mysticall belonging to this communion are as it were one and the same subsistence and wee are taken to be one Christ most effectually For by one spirit wee all are baptized into one bodie saith the same Apostle that is that we should be gathered into one bodie of Christ and haue beene all made to drinke into one spirit that is with one liuely draught of the Lords bloud b 3.19 Wee are made partakers of his one spirit 1. Corinth 12.13 And Irenaeus saith like as of drie wheat one lumpe cannot bee made without moysture nor one bread So neyther we being many could not haue beene made one in Christ Iesus without the water which is from heauē Therefore Paule 1. Cor. 6.17 He that is ioyned to the Lord is one Spirit with him whereupon also it is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is The communion of the holy Ghost a 2 Cor. 13 13 And 1. Iohn 3.24 Heereby we know that Christ abideth in vs euen by the spirit which he hath giuen vs. And Rom. 8.9 If any man hath not the spirit of Christ the same is not his Therefore like as by one and the same soule all the members of the bodie are vnited with the head and are quickened so all the faithfull although they be in earth and their head in heauen yet in verie deed by one and the same spirit issuing from the head and by euerie ioynt of the mysticall bodie yeelding nourishment are vnited with him and being knit together doe abide liue and receiue increase according to the measure of euerie part Ephes 4.16 Gal. 3.5 By what meanes doe wee in like manner communicate with the flesh of Christ Not by nature as wee communicate with the flesh of Adam nor yet by a naturall and corporall instrument but by one supernaturall and spirituall that is by faith alone created in vs by that selfe same spirit whereby Christ doth comprehend vs a Phil. 3.12 by which we doe receiue lay hold vpon and as it were by an instrumentall cause possesse Christ himselfe Concerning which manner Ephes 3.17 the Apostle saith That Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith Therfore wee are vnited to Christ by faith Therefore this vnion is made by the Spirit in respect of Christ and by faith in respect of vs. Neyther is their any other manner of vnion with Christ deliuered in the scriptures They erre therefore which say that faith is the formall cause of our vnion with Christ or of our iustification seeing that it is as it were a spirituall hand which receiueth Christ and his merits applied vnto it selfe by the holy Ghost Which are the outward instruments of this communion The Gospell and the Sacraments whereupon it is called the communion or fellowship of the Gospell b Phil. 1.5 because by the preaching of the Gospell and vse of the sacraments wee haue fellowship with Christ and his Church 1. Iohn 1.3 Is this sacramentall coniunction of vs with Christ necessarie It is being as it were the cause of all things which we haue in Chist and no other besides this for as the